The Collapse of the Soviet Union is, at best, a bunch of not-very-relevant, repackaged essays. The title, and the series name “Turning Points in World History,” would lead you to believe that this volume addressed the fall of the Soviet Union, and that upon reading, one would have a better idea of what happened than they did before. This isn’t the case. The book starts off with a quite useful 20 page overview of problems leading up to the collapse of the union, as well as various issues and major events during the process. However, what follows is two hundred or so pages worth of repackaged essays. A few are quite interesting. Most were written shortly after (or sometimes even prior to) the actual end of the Soviet Union, and are too caught up in the moment to be of much general historical use. Several even speculate that the union won’t collapse, or otherwise make interesting, but completely unhelpful, guesses of what may happen. What is most strange is that some essays are cut down, one assumes, for length, but that irrelevant speculation was left in.
This book was published seven years after the end of the Soviet Union. A tremendous amount of literature and analysis was published in those seven years, it would have made much more sense to use that material, or else title your work ‘Parts of Essays and Articles Written while the Soviet Union was Falling.’ I can only assume the publisher didn’t want to pay for actually useful articles. Tucked in the back of this book as an afterthought are some of the primary sources which are far more valuable than anything else in the book.