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In the First Circle: The First Uncensored Edition
In the First Circle: The First Uncensored Edition
In the First Circle: The First Uncensored Edition
Ebook1,171 pages21 hours

In the First Circle: The First Uncensored Edition

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  • Prison Life

  • Power Dynamics

  • Soviet Union

  • Friendship

  • Censorship

  • Prison Escape

  • Forbidden Love

  • Struggle for Survival

  • Oppressive Regime

  • Star-Crossed Lovers

  • Informant

  • Fish Out of Water

  • Power of Love

  • Reluctant Hero

  • Loyal Friend

  • Survival

  • Loyalty

  • Love & Relationships

  • Oppression

  • Surveillance

About this ebook

The thrilling Cold War masterwork by the Nobel Prize-winning author of The Gulag Archipelago, published in full for the first time.

"Solzhenitsyn's best novel. . . . A great and important book, whose qualities are finally fully available to English-speaking readers.” —Washington Post

Moscow, Christmas Eve, 1949.The Soviet secret police intercept a call made to the American embassy by a Russian diplomat who promises to deliver secrets about the nascent Soviet Atomic Bomb program. On that same day, a brilliant mathematician is locked away inside a Moscow prison that houses the country's brightest minds. He and his fellow prisoners are charged with using their abilities to sleuth out the caller's identity, and they must choose whether to aid Joseph Stalin's repressive state—or refuse and accept transfer to the Siberian Gulag camps . . . and almost certain death.

First written between 1955 and 1958, In the First Circle is Solzhenitsyn's fiction masterpiece. In order to pass through Soviet censors, many essential scenes—including nine full chapters—were cut or altered before it was published in a hastily translated English edition in 1968. Now with the help of the author's most trusted translator, Harry T. Willetts, here for the first time is the complete, definitive English edition of Solzhenitsyn's powerful and magnificent classic.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJan 3, 2012
ISBN9780062194886
In the First Circle: The First Uncensored Edition
Author

Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn

After serving as a decorated captain in the Soviet Army during World War II, Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008) was sentenced to prison for eight years for criticizing Stalin and the Soviet government in private letters. Solzhenitsyn vaulted from unknown schoolteacher to internationally famous writer in 1962 with the publication of his novella One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich; he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1968. The writer's increasingly vocal opposition to the regime resulted in another arrest, a charge of treason, and expulsion from the USSR in 1974, the year The Gulag Archipelago, his epic history of the Soviet prison system, first appeared in the West. For eighteen years, he and his family lived in Vermont. In 1994 he returned to Russia. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn died at his home in Moscow in 2008.

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Rating: 4.183843911699165 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    excellent account of a so called special prison camp for engineers in the Soviet Union.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is one of the few books I read I consider life changing. It captures and explains people and society better than any sociology or psychology book I have ever read. Take advantage of this, there is a life's worth of observations by a sharp mind distilled in a book..
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great story, I love how it was given. Good job writer! I suggest you join NovelStar’s writing competition right now until the end of May with a theme Werewolf. You can also publish your stories there. just email our editors [email protected], [email protected], or [email protected].
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book was written by Solzhenitsyn from 1955 to 1958, after his first stint in one of the notorious Gulag prison camps. In order to get it published he removed nine chapters but it still took until 1968 for this "lightened version" to be published. Even this self-censored version did not garner approbation in the Soviet Union and in 1974 Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the USSR. This complete version was put together in 1978 when Sozhenitsyn replaced the nine chapters and substantially altered a dozen more. The first version was widely praised but this uncensored edition is peerless.Most of the action in this book takes place in a prison research institute similar to one in which Solzhenitsyn spent three years. The prisoners in the institute are mainly engineers, physical scientists and technicians working on various projects that the KGB and Stalin wish to have. One of the main projects is to produce a working scrambler for telephone calls but there are other projects such as an attempt to categorize all Russian speech patterns. It is this project that brings top security officials to the prison. A telephone call from a pay phone to the American embassy was made on Christmas Eve. It tipped the Americans to a plan to steal the atomic bomb specifications from them in a few days time. Of course all the telephones at the American embassy were tapped and a recording made. Security officials wanted to know who had made the call and thought the experts in the prison could perhaps determine from a small group of diplomats privy to the plan. Many of the prisoners were former soldiers from World War II who had been captured by the Germans. Their offence was that they had spent time in German POW camps and were thus suspected of having become Western agents. Sentenced to terms of at least 10 years they were estranged from their wives and families and even if they were released they would undoubtedly have trouble for the rest of their lives. Their wives were vilified by anyone who knew their husbands were in prison and they also had problems getting job and earning enough money to live. In some ways this research institute was a cushy incarceration; the prisoners had enough to eat, they earned money that could be sent to their families, they had a yard to exercise in and they had access to books. They also liked the mental challenge of the projects on which they worked but the fact remained that they were incarcerated for a long period of time. Most of them criticized the State when they thought it was safe to do so but they had to be careful because there were free citizens working along side them and it was known that many of their comrades were stoolies. The one gleam of hope in their lives was that if they were successful in their projects they might earn remission of their sentence. Juxtaposed with their hope of release was a concern that they would be furthering the USSR's totalitarian objectives by producing the work. Horns of a dilemma indeed.So much of the state security system doesn't make sense to our Western eyes. The interminable levels of bureaucracy and oversight seem ludicrous now. When the guilty diplomat is finally arrested his experience as detailed by Solzhenitsyn is horrific. And yet he was guilty of a significant breach of security so perhaps the treatment was warranted. Except when you realize that another diplomat who was entirely innocent was arrested at the same time and put through the same treatment so guilt or innocence doesn't really matter.All this took place decades ago and we can treat this as an historical novel now. Except that the news continues to show us examples of regimes that continue to deny basic human rights to many of their citizens. Unfortunately this book is as realistic now as it was at the time it was written.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Masterpiece.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read a lot of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's work in college, but somehow managed to miss "In The First Circle," which is a shame. I enjoyed the book a lot and would have gotten even more out of it had I read it when I was immersed pretty deep in Russian history classes. The story is semi-autobiographical and follows the story of several prisoners in a sharanska -- engineers and such who have a relatively comfortable prison life (as comfortable as prison life can be) as they work on technology to advance the Russian cause. Its a struggle for some to work for a country that is causing so much misery for them and their families -- but the threat of heading to a gulag in Siberia looms over those who choose not to cooperate.I enjoyed the story a lot and especially the chapters on Stalin, which were eye opening in their likeness to another recently elected world leader. This was definitely a great book and worth the time it took to finish it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Soviet Scientists who are politically unreliable live in this prison facility and they are still allowed to work in their labs, but for the Secret Police projects....redemption may be a receding hope.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Somewhere in the Stone Reader documentary, likely its bonus features, a critic named The First Circle as the last novel of the 19th Century. The isolation of Soviet themes was likely exaggerated by the critic but the novel itself doesn't appear to reveal self-awareness: perhaps such would also be a violation of Article 58. I read this in tandem with my wife and what a glorious experience that was. As tragic as this tale of a neutered Hell of sorts remains, it begs so many questions about the nature of penal system in the Soviet Union. Cross-purposes appeared to proliferate with exposure to air. If Guilt was endemic why have them work, espeially around such sensitive areas of expertise? My naievety albeit bruised and riddled will likely cling for my life's extent. I still ponder motives.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I suspect I like the idea of Solzhenitsyn as a writer more than I like actually reading his writing. If that makes sense. I’d no real desire to read Solzhenitsyn until seeing Sokurov’s Dialogues with Solzhenitsyn, and when I saw a copy of The First Circle, and immediately linked it to Sokurov’s The Second Circle, a favourite film, then I was suddenly keen to read Solzhenitsyn. And now I have read him – this book, and A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich last year – I’m wondering what all the fuss was about. True, I’m not reading him in the original Russian, so any infelicities in prose and style are more likely the fault of the translator, but… Well, the two books by Solzhenitsyn I’ve read so far are blackly comic works about the inhuman excesses of Stalin’s regime. And, well, I knew that, I knew Stalin was, and still is, the worst despot this planet has ever seen, responsible for a vast number of deaths, more perhaps than many historical epidemics. He killed more Russians in WWII, for example, than the Germans did. The First Circle, which is quite a hefty novel, covers three days among the inmates, and others linked to them, of Mavrino Prison, which is actually a secret penal laboratory staffed by politicial prisoners and others pulled from gulags and labour camps. Compared to others in the Soviet prison system, they have it cushy. But not as cushy as the family of the prison head, which includes his son-in-law, a young and upcoming diplomat, who foolishly telephones a doctor about to leave for Paris and warns him not to hand over some medical data to the West as he had threatened. The authorities were, of course, listening in… but they can’t identify the caller. Fortunately, some of the Mavrino inmates, and some of the equipment they’ve built, could help the MGB… The contrast with the lot of the prisoners and the diplomat’s family is stark, as is the contrast between those in Mavrino and their previous experiences in the gulags. Solzhenitsyn manages to find the nobility, and venality, in his prisoners, and paints them vividly as people. But the endless reiteration of bureaucratic cruelty – epitomised, if not literalised, by the treatment of the diplomat in the Lubyanka after his arrest – does pall on occasion. The First Circle, despite its short narrative timeframe, is surprisingly rambunctious, but less philosophical than I had expected – although, to be fair, most, if not all, of the references to Russian literature were lost on me. I still like the idea of Solzhenitsyn as a writer, and I still have another of his novels on the TBR, but I’ve yet to make up my mind about his actual writing.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Reason read: 2023 Quarterly 1001 read.
    This book is a must read and plainly explains why progressive ideology does not work. Semi biographical.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Believable and unbelievable at the same time, riveting, gripping, mesmerizing, poignant, shocking saga about a special prison where the intellectuals of genius, under pretext of being political prisoners, slaved away as a result of cowardly iniquities of Stalin's rule. The time period is just about 4 days in December 1949, with, of course, steps back into the past of all the characters. One gets the feeling that these people are real, and that the author used his own experience in the labor camps to portray them. The conditions in the unusual prison were relatively "improved" (and there were several such "institutions" at the time) as compared to most labor camps. Why? So that imprisoned researchers and engineers could physically survive and produce top notch scientific research for the benefit of the ruling party. Prisoners and guards, party officials and apparatchiks - they all come to life, each with their personal history.By now we all know of Stalin's atrocities. Yet this book is one of a kind. It made me forget the world around me while I was reading it, and if that is not an indication of a great book, I don't know what is. It made my heart wither in shame for the country of my birth, for the sordid crimes committed against the brightest minds of the land.I was lucky that I came across this particular edition of the book, as, I understand, the author had to revise the novel several times over the years (due to censorship), but this was the final, most complete edition where he was able to fearlessly add quite an amount of material, and he died in 2008 knowing that it would be soon published in this form - and it was, in 2009. My only regret is that I didn't get my hands on the original Russian edition, but I can do that later. The translation is quite adequate.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It did not convince me that my stereotyping of Russian literature as slow and with too many characters is at all wrong. Well, I mostly liked it, though. Except for the one chapter which was apparently there just to enrage feminists. Since the book is set in a prison for men, I was not too bothered by there being hardly any female characters. However, was it really necessary to have a chapter in which all the female characters in the book talk about their boyfriends and their clothes in a non-plot-advancing way?

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Joseph Stalin, as presented by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s novel The First Circle, is no less than
    “The . . .
    All Highest
    Best Friend of Communications Workers; Best Friend of Counterintelligence Operatives; Best Friend of Sailors
    Father of the People; Father and Teacher; Father of Western and Eastern Peoples
    Great Coryphaeus; Great Generalissimo; Greatest of All the Great; Greatest Genius of Geniuses; Greatest Man on Earth
    Immortal
    Leader of All Progressive Humanity; Leader Elected of God; Leader of Nations; Leader of the Peoples
    Most Brilliant Strategist of All Times and Peoples; Most Humane of All Statesman
    Nearest and Dearest
    One-and-only and Infallible
    Plowman
    Sovereign
    Wise Father; Wisest of the Wise.”


    I sense authorial insincerity. Also, a lineage that would come to include Kim Jung-un.

    Most characters in The First Circle (1968 version) are not known at all to The All Highest, Best Friend of . . . etc. They are prisoners, called zeks. A select group—engineers, scientists, mathematicians, even a linguist and one artist—they are confined at a sharashka, a prison for work on technological projects. Their transgression? Somehow falling into the net of Stalin’s political paranoia. Nearly all have as their assigned work improving the state’s ability to capture more prisoners, ones as guilty or as innocent as they know themselves to be. This terrible irony informs much of what we witness in the novel.

    But why shouldn’t Stalin be paranoid? Look at what he must face:
    "The people loved him, yes, but the people themselves swarmed with shortcomings…How much quicker communism could be built if it were not for the soulless bureaucrats. If it were not for the conceited big shots. If it were not for the organizational weakness of indoctrination efforts among the masses. For the “drifting” in party education. For the slackened pace of construction, the delays in production, the output of low-quality goods, the bad planning, the apathy toward the introduction of new technology and equipment, the refusal of young people to pioneer distant areas, the loss of grain in the fields, overexpenditure by bookkeepers, thievery at warehouses, swindling by managers, sabotage by prisoners, liberalism in the police, abuse of public housing, insolent speculators, greedy housewives, spoiled children, chatterboxes on streetcars, petty-minded “criticism” in literature, liberal tendencies in cinematography."

    Lucky the people loved him. Imagine the problems had they not.

    While the political prisoners are constantly aware of any injustices they suffer, and are forced to work long hours, it’s the officials held directly responsible for the zeks’ progress who seem to suffer worse work-related stress—they have the burden of pleasing that “Most Humane of All Statesmen”:
    "Stalin was terrifying because one mistake in his presence could be that one mistake in life which set off an explosion…he did not listen to excuses, made no accusations; his yellow tiger eyes simply brightened balefully…the condemned man…left [Stalin’s office] in peace, was arrested at night, and shot by morning."

    The regular stresses of imprisonment at the sharashka are lightened by having intelligent comrades and sometimes absorbing work. They are darkened painfully by the impact imprisonment for their “crimes” can have on the status of wives and others who will suffer persecution if it is publicly known a relation is a political prisoner. The suspense of this novel, then, often is in what happens outside the prison, and that fate is linked to what happens inside it and in the net composed of the state apparatus and its informers. A baleful net it is. One where, if innocents are captured with the prey, so it goes.

    The lasting lesson is that here, the Gulag, is where a society is led when government is too much beset with fear of insecurity. The First Circle forces readers to contemplate the question of what must be risked to preserve free action and thought when any action at all risks taking them from you. No complacent answer will do and Solzhenitsyn brings emphasis to the theme early in his novel with, appropriately, an interrogatory thought: “If one is forever cautious, can one remain a human being?”
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another scathing critique of Stalinist Russia with the trappings of a thriller/mystery. A crack team of investigators (all prisoners of the Gulag) is assembled to investigate who leaked nuclear secrets to the Americans. With daring and ingenuity, they eliminate all but two suspects - but there is no further evidence. Both suspects are arrested anyway. Who else but Solzhenitsyn could come up with a novel like this?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A book that improves with each reading. Rounds out Solzhenitsyn's view of the Soviet Gulag system.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    (Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted illegally.)As an American who didn't do too much academic reading before opening CCLaP, there are of course numerous entire sections of the literary world that I could stand to learn a whole lot more about; take Russian literature for a good example, not just its beginnings with Pushkin and the like but also its heydey of the late 1800s and early 1900s (the time period of such famed authors as Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy and Chekhov), all the way through to both the sanctioned and underground writers of the Soviet period of the 1920s through '80s. And that's why I was so excited to find out that last fall, Harper Perennial ended up putting out a brand-new edition of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's 1968 In The First Circle (originally known as simply The First Circle, one of the hundreds of details that have been put back in the book for this 2009 edition), because this gave me a good excuse to sit and finally read the thing; after all, Solzhenitsyn is one of the most important writers of the entire Soviet era, essentially the first intellectual to break the news to the Western world of what Stalin's prison camps (or gulags) were actually like, a fact which earned him a Nobel Prize in 1970 even as he was still a Soviet prisoner.And the irony, of course, is that less than ten years before In The First Circle, he had been able to publish the first of this highly anti-Stalinst work in the actual Soviet Union itself -- namely, 1962's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, which is what first gained him an international following; and this was because of Nikita Khrushchev's campaign of de-Stalinization in that country then, which came as news to me when first studying this book, which gives you a good idea of just how much about Russian history I still have to learn. Even though that book went well, Solzhenitsyn knew that the original 96-chapter version of his much more expansive follow-up would never pass the muster of Soviet censors, which is why he voluntarily cut almost a dozen of those chapters from the original In The First Circle before submitting it, and radically changed a dozen more; then when he later became critical of Khrushchev himself and was once more sent back into the camps, it was this trimmed-down version that was snuck out of the country, and published in the West in 1968 to huge infamy. But like many former dissidents, Solzhenitsyn made peace with his homeland again after the fall of communism in the early '90s, moving back there in his old age and for the first time in his life going back comprehensively over his entire oeuvre; and apparently at the end of his life, he decided it was important to get the original 96-chapter version out finally to the public, the project he was working on all the way up to his death in 2008, just a year before the completely uncensored version came out.For those who don't know, the book is a highly autobiographical look at a special kind of work camp that existed during the "Stalinist Purge," the period of the 1930s and '40s when that Modernist leader and World War Two overseer had several tens of millions of his fellow citizens imprisoned and/or killed in order to keep himself and his supporters in power; because with that many people in the camps, you could of course fill entire prisons with nothing but scientists and artists if you wanted to, which is exactly what Stalinist authorities did, called "sharashkas" and actually more like college dorms than traditional prisons, where intellectuals were treated decently and fed well in exchange for them continuing to work on various cultural and scientific projects, like the space program or nuclear weapons or Bond-style spy devices. This is where the title In The First Circle comes from, in fact, inspired by Dante's concept in The Inferno of there being nine circles of Hell, the first one not actually that terrible and designed for only light sinners; because when all was said and done, except for the lack of free movement, these sharashkas actually weren't all that bad, or at least compared to the nightmarish conditions of the Siberian hard-labor camps, where said intellectuals were shipped off to if refusing to voluntarily work on these state projects. That's a major theme of the book, the philosophical argument over which of these options is better -- to remain ideologically pure yet pay a high price for it, or to do what is simply going to be done by someone else anyway, and in the meanwhile living to fight another day.And besides this, the thousand-page tome is also of course a highly detailed look at what daily Soviet life was like during the Stalinist years of the late '40s; and in fact that may be the biggest surprise about this manuscript, is that its details regarding the real Soviet Union in those years are so eerily similar to the speculative fancifulness of George Orwell's anti-Stalinist 1984 to not even be funny. Because let's not forget, Orwell wrote 1984 in 1948 (which is how he came up with the title, by simply switching the last two numbers), while Solzhenitsyn's book is set just a year later, during Christmas week of 1949, retroactively backing up many of the most outrageous suppositions of Orwell's original, including the Soviet invention of a "Newspeak" type official new language, designed to be reductive so to literally remove from dictionaries the very words themselves that stood for subversive ideas, as well as the very real endeavor back then to officially erase the very existence of state enemies, including airbrushing them out of old photos and re-writing archived newspaper articles that once mentioned them. If nothing else, this might be the most important lasting legacy of In The First Circle, is that it dutifully chronicles many of the absurdly comedic yet horrifying things that took place during the Stalinist years, shows us just how right we in the West were to be terrified back then by the idea of a Stalinist planet, even if that did lead to some pretty horrible things on their own, like McCarthyism and book burnings.But this isn't the only thing about In The First Circle to enjoy; there's also the inventive cyclical nature of its very structure, which like Richard Linklater's Slacker is told in a "vertical storytelling" style, where the different main characters of each chapter are introduced causally in the end paragraphs of the previous chapter. So in other words, one chapter might be about a prisoner in an electronics lab inside the camp, who at the end of the chapter has a conversation with the 21-year-old girl who's been hired to oversee them; the next chapter then might be about that girl now at home that evening, ending with her talking to her husband, a mid-level bureaucrat who works in the personal offices of Joseph Stalin, with the next chapter after that perhaps being about Stalin himself, one of the hundreds of both real and fictional people featured in this doorstop of a book. And then of course is the sly humor found throughout, the fascinating details about life inside one of these "intellectual prisons," the history lessons provided through the cynical discussions of the older "zeks," the ones old enough to remember the original 1917 communist revolution and who sit around endlessly debating what's gone wrong in the thirty years since, a big reason they're in the camps to begin with.Now, just so we're on the same page, let me confess that there are problems as well with In The First Circle; for example, like so many other Russian novelists, Solzhenitsyn tends to be in love with the sound of his own voice, turning what could've been a truly mindblowing 400-page book into a merely important yet highly digressive thousand-page one. Despite its limitations, though, it's a highly rewarding book to actually make one's way through and eventually finish, and I applaud Harper for spending the time, energy and money needed to put out this restored version in the first place, when commercially speaking it is obviously only going to appeal to a small niche audience. This single book alone filled a huge chunk of that gaping hole in my life when it comes to Russian history and culture, and it comes highly recommended to those who are looking to fill such a similar hole in their own lives.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Solzhenitsyn wrote this book in the early 1950s and released a highly censored version in the West in the late 60s (censored by himself in order to get it published in the Soviet Union) under the name "The First Circle." The current version, which expands the original greatly, was published in English last year. I had read the original version in Spanish when it was publihed in 1968.This is probably the best of Solzhenitsyn's writings. It's a gripping novel that carries on the themes for which he is well known and to which he dedicated his life. Respect for the individual, love for one's own country, belief on a higher being or God, human selflessness and sacrifice for a greater good, resiliency of the soul. And, of course, he brings the idiocy of bureaucratic institutions guided by non-sensical rules, particularly those when Russians lived under the Soviet regime. The blind abeyance to those rules by officials and their cruelty towards fellow human beings- who were not considered beings is a common thread throughout the novel. The novel centers on the life of scientist prisoners of the Soviet Gulag system who, because of their scientist status, were imprisoned in what was called a "sharashka"- a research prison. The sharashaka housed all types of scientists- mathematicians, physicists, engineers, etc. and was the best of the Gulags. Life in the sharashkas was better than the other Gulag prisons; for example, prisoners were allowed a visit from a spouse or relative once a year, for an hour at best (imagine that, a whole hour). Scientists in the sharashka were given this preferential treatment in order to get them to produce some invention or scientific contribution which would, in due turn, released under the name of a Soviet official or non-discredited scientist.Although it's a long novel, like many serious Russian novels, and difficult at times because of the large number of characters who are referred variously under different names (e.g., last name, first name, patronymic, and short versions of the first name) I recommend it highly. It's a thoughtful book that reminds one how lucky to live in a free country; and how thankful we should be towards those before us who have sacrificed, and continue to sacrifice, to defend our way of living.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A 2009 first release of an uncensored complete version of this Solzhenitsyn novel. The introduction's first sentence: "It has taken half a century for English-language readers to receive the definitive text of the best novel by the man who well may be the most famous author of our times." I wouldn't say it's his best novel, but it is broad while holding to a storyline that keeps a reader engaged--and is clearly Solzhenitsyn all the way.The 730+ page book is titled after the least oppressive circle of Dante's Inferno, and indeed portrays the most lax and easy of the Soviet Union's prison camps. Populated with jailed scientists tasked with inventing new technologies to aid the governments arms and espionage race with the West, the prison includes none of the traditional death-inducing grueling conditions of most of the camps, and a reader should not take away the conditions herein as reflective of the experience of the 5-20 million Russians jailed in prison camps/work camps throughout the 20th century.The book follows a novel with a concrete plot, but covers a broad range of topics from philosophy including Epicureanism and Dialectic Materialism, to moral commitments/dilemmas, to religion and government. It strays at times to ensure portrayal of everyone from Stalin himself including his thoughts to a lowly peasant living in the country-side reminiscing of the 19th century ways of living under Tsarist rule.Centering this breadth is a story of one Volodin, state diplomat, who finds himself in possession of a state secret that - if communicated to the West in time - could prevent or delay the USSR in developing nuclear weapons and thus presumably save millions of lives potentially lost in a nuclear conflict. The author toggles back and forth between the State's race to identify the anonymous informant and between a cast of intellectual engineer prisoners led by Gleb Nerzhin, a youngish outdoorsy moral martyr of sorts struggling with his wife's continued lack of means, status, and future, and Lev Rubin, the lead character of prisoners if there is one, a dedicated Marxist, gifted scientist and comedian who ultimately decides Volodin's fate.While the book could use editing, there's no clear way to delete any more than 20 pages or so without carving out the fifty or more points and dilemmas Solzhenitsyn leaves with the reader. A hard, slow read with little pace, the book is a realistic portrayal of perhaps every issue facing the Gulag inhabitant with the least struggles.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I am about to do a very great injustice to Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, and I apologize for it in advance: I am going to discuss one of his novels without reference to its artistic merit. Let me make it clear that _The First Circle_ is a book that will always reward its reader, written as it is in a very coherent manner with an immense amount of skill and depth of characterization -- but at this point in time, what's more important than that is politics.

    If you still have any doubts as to the depths of depravity characteristic of Joseph Stalin -- if, for example, you think he wasn't as bad as Hitler -- you _must_ read this book. Fictional though it is, its portrait of Stalin is true to life, and that's all I need to say on _that_ subject. He is in a way the central figure, the protagonist, of the novel; it's his policies, his paranoia born of his own successful treachery, his unhealthy fear of spies and Heaven only knows what else, that created the Russia in which the fictitious characters of the novel are trapped. Solzhenitsyn had first-hand experience of the then-MGB (IIRC) and the GULAG network; he knows only too well, in this book, of what he writes...
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Unlike Ivan Denosovich, the residents of this Russian prison are housed in a Moscow suburb, and spend their days, not laying bricks and worrying about food, but in a lab or a workshop, trying to improve the Soviet communications system. The First Circle of the title refers to Dante's first circle of hell, where the Greek philosophers got to be near paradise, but could not enter it.

    The prisoners have the understanding that they have struck a faustian bargain--they get to stay in relative luxury (for a prison camp), but they are also working for the machine that placed them there, and which puts people in far worse places every day.

    Do they continue to serve the beast, as people without conscious, or do they rebel, and give up their coveted spot in the soviet food chain?
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I feel that I should have liked this better, but it made me tired and the characters did not a whole lot for me. I would have enjoyed a few short stories more. All in all, I guess I am glad that I have read some Solzhenitsyn, but he did not move my earth.

Book preview

In the First Circle - Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn

Chapter 1

Torpedo

THE FILIGREED HANDS POINTED to five minutes past four.

The bronze of the clock was lusterless in the dying light of a December day.

A high window, beginning at floor level, looked down on bustling Kuznetsky Most. Yardmen trudged doggedly to and fro, scraping up fresh snow that was already caking and turning brown under the feet of pedestrians.

State Counselor Grade Two Innokenty Volodin surveyed all this unseeingly, lolling against the edge of the embrasure and whistling something long drawn out and elusive. His fingertips flipped through the pages of a glossy foreign magazine, but he had no eyes for them.

Volodin State Counselor Grade Two—the diplomatic-service equivalent of lieutenant colonel—was tall and narrow-shouldered and wore a suit of some silky material instead of his uniform, looking more like a well-off young drone than an official of some importance in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

It was time to switch the lights on or go home, but he stayed where he was.

Four o’clock was not the end of the working day but only of its daytime part. Everyone would now go home, have something to eat, and take a nap; then at 10:00 p.m. the thousands and thousands of windows in forty-five All-Union and twenty Union-Republican ministries would light up again. A single individual ringed by a dozen fortress walls could not sleep at night, and he had trained the whole of official Moscow to stay awake with him until three or four in the morning. Knowing the peculiar nocturnal habits of their lord and master, all sixty-odd ministers kept vigil, like schoolboys awaiting a summons from the headmaster. To fight off sleep they would summon their deputies; then deputy ministers would rouse department heads, research officers would erect ladders and swarm over card indexes, clerks would charge along hallways, and stenographers would break their pencil points.

Today was no exception. It was Christmas Eve on Western calendars. All the embassies had fallen silent and given up calling two days ago, but the ministry would be staying up through the night just the same.

They—the Western diplomats—had two weeks of vacation ahead of them. Trusting babes! Stupid donkeys!

The young man’s nervous fingers paged through the magazine hastily, mechanically, while hot waves of terror welled up inside him, then subsided, leaving him cold.

Innokenty flung the magazine away and began pacing the room, shuddering.

Should he call or shouldn’t he? Did it have to be now? Would Thursday or Friday be too late over there?

Too late. . . . There was so little time to think about it, and absolutely nobody to ask for advice!

Surely there was no way of finding out who had made a call from a phone booth? If he spoke only in Russian? If he didn’t hang around but walked away quickly? Surely they couldn’t identify a muffled voice over the telephone? It must be a technical impossibility.

In three or four days’ time he would be flying there himself. It would be more logical to wait. More sensible.

But it would be too late.

Oh, hell! His shoulders, unused to such burdens, hunched in a shiver. It would have been better if he had never found out. Better not to know.

He scooped up all the papers on his desk and carried them to the safe. His agitation grew. Innokenty lowered his brow onto the dull-painted iron of the safe and rested there with closed eyes.

Then suddenly, as though he felt his last chance slipping away from him, without calling for a car, without so much as closing his inkwell, Innokenty rushed for the door, locked it, handed his key to the guard at the end of the hallway, almost ran down the stairs, overtaking the usual gold-braided personages, dived into his overcoat, planted his hat on his head, and ran out into the damp twilight.

Rapid motion brought him some relief.

His low French shoes, worn fashionably without galoshes, sank into the slush.

As he passed the Vorovsky Monument in the ministry courtyard, Innokenty looked up and shuddered. The building of the Great Lubyanka, which looked out on Furkasov Passage, suddenly took on a new significance for him. This gray-black nine-storied hulk was a battleship, and the eighteen pilasters loomed like eighteen gun turrets on its starboard side. And Innokenty’s tiny craft was being helplessly sucked into its path, under the bows of the swift, heavy vessel.

Or no—he wasn’t a helpless captive canoe; he was deliberately heading toward the battleship like a torpedo!

He could hold out no longer! He turned right onto Kuznetsky Most. A taxi was about to pull away from the curb. Innokenty grabbed it, hurried the driver downhill, then told him to turn left, under the newly lit streetlights of the Petrovka.

He still couldn’t decide where to make his call—where he could be sure that no one would be hovering impatiently, distracting him, peering through the door. But if he looked for a single phone booth in some quiet spot, he would make himself more conspicuous. Wouldn’t it be better to pick one in the thick of it all, as long as it had soundproof brick or stone walls? And how stupid he had been to chase around in a taxi and make the driver a witness. He dug into his pocket, hoping not to find the fifteen kopecks for the call. If he didn’t, he could obviously put it off.

At the traffic light on Okhotny Ryad, his fingers felt and drew out two fifteen-kopeck pieces simultaneously. So that was that.

It seemed to calm him down. Dangerous or not, he had no alternative.

If we live in a state of constant fear, can we remain human?

Without intending it, Innokenty now found himself riding along the Mokhovaya past the embassy. Fate was taking a hand. He pressed his face against the window, craning his neck, trying unsuccessfully to make out which windows were lit up.

They passed the university, and Innokenty motioned to the right. It was as though he were circling on his torpedo to position it properly.

They sped up to the Arbat; Innokenty gave the driver two bills, stepped out, and crossed the square, trying to moderate his pace.

His throat and his mouth were dry with the dryness that no drink can help.

By now the Arbat was all lit up. In front of the Khudozhestvenny Cinema, there was a long line for The Ballerina’s Romance. A faint bluish mist clouded the red M above the metro station. A woman with a dark southern complexion was selling little yellow flowers. The doomed man could no longer see the battleship, but his breast was bursting with desperate resolve.

Remember, though: not a word in English. Let alone French. Mustn’t leave the smallest clue for the tracker dogs.

Innokenty walked on, erect and no longer hurrying. A girl eyed him as he passed.

And another one. Very pretty, too. Wish me well out of it!

How big the world is and how full of opportunities! But all that’s left for you is this narrow passage.

One of the wooden booths outside the station was empty but seemed to have a broken window. Innokenty walked on, into the station.

Here the four booths set into the wall were all occupied. But in the one to the left, a rough-looking character, not quite sober, was finishing his call and hanging up the receiver. He smiled at Innokenty and started to say something. Innokenty took his place in the booth, carefully pulled the thick-paned door closed, and held it shut with one hand; the other, still gloved, trembled as it dropped a coin into the slot and dialed a number.

After several prolonged buzzes the receiver was lifted at the other end.

Is this the secretariat? Innokenty asked, trying to disguise his voice.

Yes.

Please put me through to the ambassador immediately.

The answer came in very good Russian.

I can’t call the ambassador. What is your business?

Give me the chargé then! Or the military attaché! Please be quick!

There was a pause for thought at the other end. Innokenty put himself in fate’s hands: If they refused—let it go at that, don’t try a second time.

Very well, I’m connecting you with the attaché.

He heard them making the connection.

Through the thick glass he saw people passing, within inches of the row of phone booths, hurrying, overtaking one another. One person peeled off and stood impatiently waiting his turn outside Innokenty’s booth.

Somebody with a thick accent and a well-fed, indolent voice spoke into the telephone:

Hello. What did you want?

Is this the military attaché? Innokenty asked brusquely.

Yes, air attaché, drawled the voice at the other end.

What next? Shielding the receiver with his hand, Innokenty spoke in a low but urgent voice:

Mr. Air Attaché! Please write this down and pass it to the ambassador immediately.

Just a moment, the leisurely voice answered, I’ll call an interpreter.

I can’t wait! Innokenty was seething. And he had dropped his attempt to disguise his voice. And I will not talk to any Soviet person! Do not put the receiver down! This is a life-and-death matter for your country! And not only your country! Listen! Within the next few days a Soviet agent called Georgy Koval will pick something up at a shop selling radio parts; the address is—

I don’t quite understand, the attaché calmly replied in halting Russian. He, of course, was sitting on a comfortable sofa, and no one was on his trail. Animated female voices could be heard in the background.

Call the Canadian Embassy. They have good Russian speakers there.

The phone booth floor was burning under Innokenty’s feet, and the black receiver with its heavy steel chain melting in his hand. But a single foreign word could destroy him!

Listen! Listen! he cried in despair. In a few days’ time the Soviet agent Koval will be given important technological information about the production of the atomic bomb, at a radio shop—

What? Which avenue? The attaché sounded surprised. He thought a moment.

Who are you, anyway? How do I know you’re speaking the truth?

Do you know what a risk I’m taking? Innokenty shot back. Somebody seemed to be knocking on the glass behind him. The attaché was silent. Perhaps taking a long puff at his cigarette.

The atomic bomb? he repeated dubiously. But who are you? Tell me your name.

There was a muffled click, and dead silence followed, unbroken by crackling or buzzing.

They had been cut off.

Chapter 2

A Miscue

THERE ARE ESTABLISHMENTS in which you suddenly come across a dull red lamp over a door marked Staff Only. Or, more recently, it may be an imposing plate-glass sign: Strictly No Entrance for Unauthorized Persons. There may even be a grim security guard sitting at a little table and inspecting passes. As always, when confronted with the forbidden, your imagination runs away with you.

In reality, the door opens onto another unremarkable corridor, perhaps a bit cleaner. A strip of cheap red carpet, standard government issue, runs down the middle. The parquet floor has been more or less polished. Spittoons are stationed at fairly frequent intervals.

But there are no people. There is no movement out of one door and into another. And these doors are all covered with black leather, black leather stuffed with padding, pinned down by white studs, and bearing shiny oval number plates.

Even those who work in one such room know less about what goes on in the room next door than they do about the day’s gossip on the island of Madagascar.

On the same gloomy frost-free December evening, in the building of the Moscow Central Automatic Telephone Exchange, on one of those forbidden corridors and in one of those inaccessible rooms, known to the superintendent of the building as Room 194 and to Department XI of the Sixth Administration of the Ministry of State Security as Post A-1, two lieutenants were on duty. Not in uniform, however: They could enter and leave the telephone exchange with greater anonymity in civilian dress. One wall was occupied by a switchboard and acoustic apparatus—black plastic and shiny metal. A long schedule of instructions, on dingy paper, hung on the other.

These instructions anticipated and warned against every imaginable breach of or departure from routine in monitoring and recording calls to and from the U.S. Embassy, stipulating that two persons should be on duty at all times, one listening in continuously, never removing the earphones, while the other should never leave the room except to go to the bathroom, and that they should alternate duties at half-hour intervals.

If you followed these instructions, mistakes were impossible.

But such is the fatal incompatibility of officialdom’s perfectionism with man’s pitiful imperfection that these instructions had for once been disobeyed. Not because the men on duty were novices, but because they were experienced enough to know that nothing special ever happened, least of all on the Western Christmas Eve.

One of them, the flat-nosed Lieutenant Tyukin, was certain to be asked in next Monday’s politics class who are ‘the friends of the people’ and how do they fight against the social democrats, why we had to break with the Mensheviks at the Second Congress and had been right to do so, why we had reunited at the Fifth Congress, again acting correctly, then at the Sixth Congress had again gone our separate ways and yet again had been right to do so.

Tyukin wouldn’t have dreamed of starting his reading on Saturday, with little hope of memorizing anything then, except that after duty on Sunday he and his sister’s husband intended to do some serious drinking. He would never be able to take in any of that crap with a hangover on Monday morning, and the Party organizer had already rebuked him and threatened to bring him before the Party bureau. The important thing was not answering in class but being able to present a written summary. Tyukin hadn’t been able to find time all that week and had been putting it off all day, but now he had asked his colleague to keep working for a while, made himself comfortable in a corner by the light of a desk lamp, and started copying into his exercise notebook selected passages from the Short Course.*

They hadn’t yet gotten around to switching on the overhead light. The auxiliary lamp by the tape recorders was on. Kuleshov, the curly-haired lieutenant with the chubby chin, sat with his earphones on, feeling bored. The embassy had phoned in its shopping orders in the morning, and from lunchtime onward seemed to have fallen asleep. There hadn’t been a single call.

After sitting like this for some time, Kuleshov decided to take a look at the sores on his left leg. They kept breaking out again and again for unknown reasons. They had been dressed with brilliant green zinc ointment and a streptocidal preparation, but instead of healing, the sores had spread under the scabs. The pain had begun to make walking uncomfortable. The MGB clinic had made an appointment for him with a professor. Kuleshov had recently been given a new flat, and his wife was expecting a child. And now these ulcers were poisoning what should have been a comfortable life.

Kuleshov removed the tight earphones, which pressed on his ears, moved to a brighter spot, rolled up the left leg of his trousers and his long underwear, and began cautiously feeling and picking at the edges of the scabs. Dark pus oozed out under the pressure of his fingers. The pain made his head spin and blotted out all other thoughts. For the first time the thought shot through his mind that perhaps these were not just sores but . . . he tried to remember a terrible word he had heard somewhere: gangrene? . . . And . . . what was that other thing?

So he did not immediately notice the bobbins start noiselessly spinning as the tape recorder automatically switched itself on. Without taking his bare leg from its support, Kuleshov reached for the earphones, put one ear to them, and heard:

How do I know you’re speaking the truth?

Do you know what a risk I’m taking?

The atomic bomb? But who are you? Tell me your name.

The atomic bomb! Obeying an impulse as instinctive as that of a man who grabs the nearest object to break his fall, Kuleshov tore the plug from the switchboard, disconnecting the two telephones—and only then realizing that, contrary to instructions, he had not intercepted the caller’s number.

The first thing he did was look over his shoulder. Tyukin was scribbling his summary and had eyes for nothing else. Tyukin was a friend, but Kuleshov had been warned to keep an eye on him, which meant that Tyukin had received similar instructions. As he turned the Rewind knob of the recorder and plugged the spare recorder in to the embassy loop, Kuleshov thought at first of erasing the recorded message to conceal his blunder. But he remembered at once that his chief had often said that the work of their post was duplicated by automatic recording in another place, and he dropped that silly idea. Of course the recording was duplicated, and for suppressing a conversation like that you’d be shot!

The tape had rewound itself. He turned the Play knob. The criminal was in a great hurry and very agitated. Where could he have been speaking from? Obviously not from a private apartment. And hardly from his place of work. It was always from public phone booths that people tried to get through to embassies.

Opening his directory of phone booth numbers, Kuleshov hurriedly dialed a telephone located on the steps of the entrance to the Sokolniki metro station.

"Genka! Genka! he croaked. Emergency! Call the operations room! They may still be able to catch him!"


* Short Course: The History of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks)—Short Course. The central catechism under Stalin, required reading for all Soviet citizens from 1938 to 1956, allegedly authored by Stalin.

Chapter 3

Sharashka

NEW BOYS!

They’ve brought us some new boys!

Where are you from, comrades?

Friends, then, where are you from?

What are those patches on your chests and on your caps?

That’s where our numbers were. We had them on our backs and our knees as well. They ripped them off when they sent us out of the camp.

What do you mean, numbers?

What century are we living in? Numbers sewn on human beings? Tell me, Lev Grigorievich, is this what you call progress?

Valentin, old buddy, don’t try starting anything; go and get your supper.

I don’t feel like supper when I know that people are walking around somewhere with numbers on their foreheads!

Friends! You’re getting nine packs of Belomors apiece for the second half of December. You’re in luck.

What sort of Belomors? Java or Ducat?

Half and half.

Dirty bums. It’s poison gas, that Ducat. I’ll complain to the minister—I give you my word I will.

What are those overalls you’re wearing? Why are you all decked out like parachutists?

It’s a sort of uniform they’ve introduced. They used to issue worsted suits and good overcoats, but the bastards are cutting back on us now.

Look! New boys!

They’ve brought us a new batch!

"What’s the matter with you supermen? Never seen a real live zek before? What are you blocking the hallway for?"

Well, well! Who’s this I see? Dof-Donskoy!? Where’ve you been all this time, Dof? I looked all over Vienna for you in ’45—all over Vienna!

Never seen such a ragged, unshaven lot. Which camp have you come from, friends?

From different camps. Rechlag . . .

. . . Dubrovlag. . . .

Never heard of them, and I’ve been inside nine years.

They’re new ones—special camps, they’re called. They were only started in ’48.

They grabbed me and slung me into the meat wagon right outside the entrance to the Prater in Vienna.

Hang on, Mitya, let’s hear what the new boys have to say.

No, let’s get some exercise! And a breath of fresh air! Lev will debrief the new boys, never fear.

Second shift! Suppertime!

Ozerlag, Luglag, Steplag, Kamyshlag. . . .

Makes you think there’s some unrecognized poet sitting in the Ministry of State Security. He hasn’t got the stamina for whole poems, can’t get it together, so he thinks up poetic names for prison camps.

Ha-ha-ha! It’s a funny world, men, a mighty funny world! What century are we living in?

Keep it down a bit, Valentin, boy!

Excuse me—what’s your name?

Lev Grigorievich.

Are you an engineer as well?

No, I’m a linguist.

Linguist? They even have linguists in this place?

Better ask who they don’t have here. There are mathematicians, physicists, chemists, radio engineers, telephone engineers, designers, artists, translators, bookbinders—they even shipped in a geologist by mistake.

So what does he do?

He’s all right; he got himself fixed up in the photography lab. There’s even an architect. A pretty special one at that! Stalin’s personal architect. Built all his dachas for him. Now he’s inside with us.

Lev! You pose as a materialist, but you’re always ramming spiritual pabulum down people’s throats! Listen, friends! When they march you into the mess hall, we’ve set out about thirty plates for you on the last table by the window. Chow down all you can hold; just make sure your bellies don’t burst!

Thanks very much, but aren’t you robbing yourselves?

Costs us nothing. Anyway, who eats pickled herring and millet mush nowadays? Too, too common!

What did you say? Millet mush common? It’s five years since I saw any!

It probably isn’t millet but magara.

Magara? Are you crazy? Just let them try magara on us, and see what we’d do to them!

What’s the food like in transit prisons nowadays?

Well, in Chelyabinsk—

The old prison or the new one?

I can see you’re an expert. The new one—

Are they still economizing on bathrooms upstairs? Do they still make the zeks carry garbage buckets three stories down?

Yes, it’s just the same.

You said this place is a sharashka? What’s that mean—sharashka?

How much bread do you get here?

Who hasn’t had supper yet? Second sitting!

We get four hundred grams of white bread per man, and there’s black bread on the tables.

What d’you mean, on the tables?

What I say. It’s there on the tables, ready cut. If you want it you can take it; if you don’t you needn’t.

You mean we’re in Europe here or what?

Not quite Europe. You get white bread on the table there, not black.

Ah, but we break our backs working twelve or fourteen hours a day for those Belomor cigarettes and a bit of butter.

Sitting at a desk all day? Call that backbreaking work? Swinging a pick, now that’ll give you a backache!

Sitting in this sharashka, God knows, is like being stuck in a swamp. You’re cut off from the land of the living. Did you hear that, gentlemen? It seems they’ve taken a firm line with the baddies, and you don’t get mugged even in Krasnaya Presnya nowadays.

Professors get forty grams of the best butter, engineers twenty. From each according to his ability, to each according to what is available.

So you worked on the Dnieper Dam?

Yes, I worked for Winter. It’s the Dnieper Dam that landed me inside.

How did that happen, then?

Well, I’ll tell you. I sold it to the Germans.

The Dnieper Hydroelectric Station?

Come on—it was blown up!

So what? I sold it to them after it was blown up.

Honestly, it’s like a breath of fresh air! Transit camps! Prison trucks! Camps! Keep moving! Sovietskaya Gavan, here I come!

And back again. Val boy, right back here.

Yes! Back in a hurry, of course!

Do you know, Lev Grigorievich, this rush of impressions, this change of scenery is making my head spin. I’ve lived fifty-two years, recovered twice from fatal illnesses, been married twice to rather pretty women, fathered sons, been published in seven languages, received academic prizes, and never have I been so blissfully happy as today! What a place! To think that tomorrow I won’t be driven into icy water! I’ll get forty grams of butter! There’ll be black bread on the tables! Books aren’t forbidden! You can shave yourself! Guards don’t beat zeks! What a great day! What radiant heights! Maybe I’m dead? Maybe I’m dreaming? I feel as though I am in heaven!

"No, my dear sir, you are still in hell, only you’ve ascended to its highest and best circle—the first. You were asking what a sharashka is. You could say it was invented by Dante. He was at his wits’ end as to where to put the ancient sages. It was his Christian duty to consign those heathens to hell. But a Renaissance conscience couldn’t reconcile itself to lumping those luminaries in with the rest of the sinners and condemning them to physical torment. So Dante imagined a special place for them in hell. Let’s see. . . . It goes something like this:

"We reached the base of a great Citadel . . .

"Look around at the old arches here!

"Circled by seven towering battlements . . .

Through seven gates I entered with those sages. . . .

You came here in the Black Marias, so you didn’t see the gates—

"There with a solemn and majestic poise

stood many people gathered in the light . . .

with neither joy nor sorrow in their bearing. . . .

I half-saw, half-sensed,

what quality of souls lived in that light. . . .

What souls are these whose merit lights their way

even in Hell? What joy sets them apart?"

"Ach, Lev Grigorievich, I can explain it in a way that the professor will much more readily understand. You need only read Pravda’s front page: ‘It has been shown that a good fleece of wool depends on the feeding and general care of the sheep.’ "

Chapter 4

A Protestant Christmas

THE CHRISTMAS TREE was a pine twig stuck in a crack in the top of a stool. A multicolored string of low-wattage bulbs was wound around it twice. Milk white vinyl-covered wires connected them to an accumulator on the floor.

The stool stood in a corner of the room, in the passage between two double bunks. The mattress from one of the upper bunks screened the whole corner and the tiny Christmas tree from the glare of the overhead lights.

Six men in thick dark blue denims, of the sort worn by parachutists, had taken their stand by the tree and were listening gravely, heads bowed, as one of their number, brisk Max Adam, said a Protestant Christmas prayer.

There was no one else in the whole large room, which was densely furnished with identical double bunks, welded together by the frames. After supper and an hour to stretch their legs, all the others had gone to work the evening shift.

Max finished his prayer, and all six sat down. Five of them were overwhelmed by bittersweet nostalgia for their homeland—their beloved, orderly, and reliable Germany, under whose tiled roofs this first festival of the year was so joyous and so moving. The sixth, a big man with a bushy black beard, was a Jew and a Communist.

Fate had intertwined Lev Rubin’s fortunes with those of Germany, in peace and war.

In peacetime he had been an expert on the German language; he spoke impeccable modern Hoch Deutsch, but could when necessary have recourse to several dialects. Every German who had ever put his name to a published work he remembered as effortlessly as if he had been a personal acquaintance. He spoke of little towns on the Rhine as though he had often strolled about their well-washed shady streets.

In fact, he had been only in Prussia, and only with the army.

As a major in the Department of Psychological Warfare, he had singled out in prisoner-of-war camps Germans reluctant to remain behind barbed wire and willing to assist him. He carried them off and housed them comfortably in a special school. Some of them would be passed back through the lines equipped with TNT and forged reichsmarks, leave passes, and army paybooks. They might blow up bridges, or they might just roll on home and enjoy themselves until they were caught. With others he talked about Goethe and Schiller and discussed the broadcasts they would make through megaphones, urging their brothers-in-arms to turn their weapons against Hitler. Some of his collaborators with a flair for ideology found it particularly easy to switch from Nazism to Communism, and they were transferred in due course to various Free German Committees, where they prepared themselves for the socialist Germany of the future. The simple soldiers among them—and Rubin himself with them—by the end of the war had twice crossed the ruptured front lines and taken fortified positions by force of persuasion, so as to save Soviet manpower.

But in his efforts to convert Germans, he had inevitably begun to feel close to them, gotten to like them, and, once Germany was prostrate, to pity them. That was what had landed Rubin in prison. His enemies in the administration accused him of speaking out against the slogan Blood for blood, a death for a death after the offensive of January 1945.

It was more or less true. Rubin did not try to refute it. It was infinitely more complicated than it might appear from a newspaper report or the wording of the charge against him.

By the stool with the illuminated Christmas tree, two lockers had been pushed together to serve as a table. They began serving one another. There was canned fish (prisoners in the sharashka were allowed to make purchases from Moscow shops), there was lukewarm coffee, and there was homemade cake. The conversation was sober and subdued. Max steered it onto peaceful subjects: old folk customs, sentimental Christmas Eve stories. Alfred, the bespectacled Viennese physics student whose course had been interrupted by the war, spoke with a comical Austrian accent. Gustav, a moonfaced youngster with a piglet’s pink transparent ears, stared wide-eyed at the Christmas lights, scarcely daring to join in the conversation of his elders. (A member of the Hitler Jugend, he had become a prisoner of war one week after the war ended.)

The conversation, however, took a wrong turn. Somebody mentioned Christmas 1944, five years back, and the Ardennes offensive. The Germans, to a man, were proud of this glorious piece of ancient history: The vanquished had routed the victors. And they remembered how on that Christmas Eve Germany had listened to Goebbels.

Rubin, one hand toying with a strand of his bristly black beard, confirmed what they said. He remembered that speech. It had been a great success. Goebbels had spoken as though it cost him a great mental effort, as though he bore on his own shoulders all the burdens that were bringing Germany to its knees. He probably had already a presentiment of his own end.

SS Obersturmbannführer Simmel, whose long body could scarcely fit in between the table and the double bunk, did not appreciate Rubin’s politeness. He couldn’t bear the idea that this Jew would dare to express any opinion of Goebbels at all. He would never have demeaned himself by sitting at the same table with Rubin if he had felt able to forgo Christmas Eve with his compatriots. But the other Germans were all insistent that Rubin should be there. For this little group of German exiles, storm blown into the gilded cage of a sharashka in the heart of barbarous and chaotic Muscovy, there was only one person with whom they felt any kinship, only one they understood: this major in the enemy’s army, who had spent the whole war sowing the seeds of discord and moral collapse among them. Only he could make comprehensible the customs and mentality of the natives, advise on behavior, and translate the latest international news from Russian.

Casting around for a remark that would really sting Rubin, Simmel said that, anyway, there were hundreds of pyrotechnic orators in Germany—why, he wondered, was it the rule with the Bolsheviks to read out speeches submitted for approval beforehand?

The taunt was all the more hurtful for being justified. There was no point in trying to explain to an enemy and a murderer that oratory, wonderful oratory, had once existed in Russia but that Party Committees had stamped it out. Rubin felt only disgust for Simmel, nothing more. He remembered Simmel’s arrival in the sharashka after years in Butyrki Prison, wearing a creaking leather tunic: There were still marks on the sleeve where the insignia of the SS (the civilian SS, the worst of the lot) had been picked off. Even prison had not softened the expression of hardened cruelty on Simmel’s face. Simmel was the reason why Rubin had not wanted to come to tonight’s supper party. But the others had begged him so earnestly, and he felt so sorry for them, lost and lonely as they were, that he could not cast a cloud on their celebration by refusing.

Rubin suppressed his urge to explode and translated into German Pushkin’s advice not to judge a shoe by its uppers.

Max mildly interrupted what might have developed into a quarrel with his own version of a dubiously relevant line from Pushkin. Under Lev’s guidance, he said, he could now spell out poems by Pushkin in the original. But why hadn’t Reinhold taken any whipped cream with his cake? Where, though, had Lev been that Christmas Eve? Lev recalled that he had been in his dugout near Rozhan in the Narev bridgehead.

And just as the five Germans recalled their torn and trampled Germany, piously painting it in the brightest colors, Rubin, too, found vivid memories returning of the Narev bridgehead, then of the sodden forests along the Ilmen.

The Christmas tree lights were reflected in moist eyes.

As usual, they asked Rubin for the latest news. But he would have felt awkward offering a review of the past month. He could not let himself become a neutral purveyor of information, could not give up hope of reeducating these people. Yet he could not convince them that in our complicated age socialist truth sometimes forces its way forward by a tortuous path. All he could do was to select for them, as he did for History (and, without realizing it, for himself), only those current events that confirmed that the high road had been accurately predicted, ignoring those that seemed likely to divert it into a quagmire. But December had been a month in which, apart from the Sino-Soviet negotiations and the Boss’s seventieth birthday, nothing positive seemed to have happened. He would feel ashamed—and it would serve no educational purpose—to tell the Germans about Traicho Kostov’s trial, at which the foreign correspondents had been confronted rather late in the day with a sham recantation, allegedly written by Kostov in his death cell, so that the whole crude judicial farce had come apart at the seams.

On this occasion, Rubin dwelled mostly on the historic victory of the Chinese Communists. The amiable Max listened to Rubin and nodded encouragement. His eyes were guileless. He was attached to Rubin but, since the Berlin blockade, had begun to distrust much of what he said, and (unknown to Rubin) in the shortwave lab where he worked, he had occasionally risked his neck by assembling, listening to, and then dismantling a miniature receiver that looked nothing at all like a receiver. He had heard, from Cologne and on the German service of the BBC, not only how Kostov had retracted the self-incriminating statements that his interrogators had obtained by torture but also about the consolidation of the Atlantic alliance and the new prosperity of West Germany. He had, of course, passed all this on to the other Germans, and they lived for the day when Adenauer would free them.

Still, they nodded politely as Rubin talked.

Anyway, it was high time for him to be gone; he had not been released from the evening shift. He praised the cake (Hildemuth, the fitter, bowed in gratification) and asked the company to excuse him. His hosts politely delayed his departure; then they thanked him for coming, and he thanked them for having him. After which the Germans settled down to sing Christmas carols sotto voce.

Just as he was, with a Mongolian-Finnish dictionary and a slim volume of Hemingway in English under his arm, Rubin went out into the hallway. The hallway was broad, with an unpainted and scuffed wooden floor. There were no windows, and the electric light was on day and night. It was the same hallway in which, during the supper break an hour earlier, other lovers of novelty had interviewed the new zeks fresh from the camps. Of the doors along the hallway, one opened onto the inner prison stairway, and several others belonged to room-cells. They were rooms because the doors had no locks, but they were also cells because spy holes, little glass windows, had been set in the doors. The guards here had no use for these peepholes, but they had been adopted in accordance with the regulations for real prisons, simply because the name given to the sharashka in official documents was Ministry of State Special Prison No. 1.

Through one such peephole could be seen a Christmas Eve party like the one he had left, for the Latvian fraternity, who had also been given time off.

All the other zeks were at work, and Rubin was worried that he might be stopped at the exit and dragged off to the security officer to give an explanation in writing. At both ends of the hallway there were doors that filled its whole width: At one end a wooden four-paneled folding door under a semicircular arch led to what had once been the sanctuary of the seminary’s church, and was now also a room-cell. At the other there was a locked two-panel door reinforced from top to bottom with sheet iron. This door, which led to their place of work, the prisoners called the royal gates.

Rubin walked up to the iron door and knocked on the Judas window. A guard’s face pressed against the glass on the other side.

The key turned quietly in the lock. As luck would have it, the guard was easygoing.

Rubin went out onto the grand stairway of the ancient structure, crossed the marble landing, walked past two ornate wrought-iron lamps, which no longer gave light. Still on the second story, he entered a hallway and pushed open a door marked Acoustics Laboratory.

Chapter 5

Boogie-Woogie

THE ACOUSTICS LABORATORY occupied a lofty, spacious room with several windows that was chaotically cluttered with wooden racks and dazzling bright white aluminum counters loaded with apparatus, assembly benches, newish plywood cabinets from Moscow workshops, and comfortable writing desks that had seen better days in the Berlin building of the Lorenz Radio Company.

Big bulbs in frosted fixtures shed a pleasant, diffused white light.

There was a soundproof acoustic chamber, with sides short of the ceiling, in the far corner of the room. It looked unfinished: Its exterior was upholstered with ordinary sacking stuffed with straw. The door, which was a yard thick but hollow, like a circus clown’s dumbbells, was open at present, and the cloth door curtain was thrown back to air the booth. Near the booth, rows of copper sockets gleamed in the black lacquered panel of the central switchboard.

A diminutive fragile girl with a pale unsmiling face sat at a desk with her back to the booth, holding a goat’s-hair shawl tight around her narrow shoulders.

There were perhaps ten other people in the room, all men, all in identical blue overalls, busying themselves by the light of the overhead fixtures and the pools of brightness from swivel desk lamps (also of German origin), walking back and forth, hammering, soldering, sitting at assembly benches and writing desks. Three makeshift receivers mounted on aluminum panels, without casing, provided a medley of jazz, piano music, and songs from the Eastern European democracies.

Rubin walked slowly across the laboratory to his desk, holding the Mongolian-Finnish dictionary and Hemingway down low. White cake crumbs had lodged in his wavy beard.

The overalls issued to the prisoners were all cut from the same pattern, but there were different ways of wearing them. One of Rubin’s buttons was missing, his belt was slack, and loose folds sagged over his belly. A young prisoner stood in his way. He was wearing exactly similar overalls but was something of a dandy. His blue cloth belt was drawn tight around his slim waist, and the top button of his overalls was undone to reveal a light blue silk shirt, faded after many washes but held together around his neck by a bright tie. This young man occupied the whole width of the side passageway on Rubin’s route. His right hand lightly waved a hot soldering iron; he had rested his left foot on a chair and his left elbow on his knee as he pored over the diagram of a radio in an English-language journal that lay open on his bench, simultaneously singing

Boogie-woogie, boogie-woogie.

Samba! Samba!

Rubin could not get by and stood there for a moment with an exaggeratedly meek look on his face. The young man appeared not to notice him.

Val, my friend, do you think you could pull in your rear foot a bit?

Val answered, without looking up from his diagram, in short, sharp bursts.

Lev Grigorievich! Back off! Get lost! Why do you turn up here in the evening? What is there for you to do?

He raised his light, boyish eyes to look at Rubin wonderingly. What the hell do we need a philologist for, anyway? Ha! ha! ha! (three carefully separated syllables). You’re no engineer, after all! It’s a scandal!

Comically protruding his fleshy lips and widening his eyes, Rubin lisped: Baby mine! I’ve known engineers who kept a soda-pop stall.

Not me! Valentulya snapped. I’m a first-class engineer, and don’t you forget it! He laid his soldering iron down on its wire stand and straightened up, tossing back an unruly mass of silky hair the same color as the lump of rosin on his bench. He was fresh complexioned, his face was unmarked by experience, and his movements were boyish. It was impossible to believe that he had graduated before the war, been in a German POW camp, spent some time in Europe, and was now in his fifth year of imprisonment back in his homeland.

Rubin sighed. Without a duly witnessed reference from your Belgian boss, our administration cannot—

Reference, nothing. Valentin made a convincing show of indignation. How dense can you be? Surely you realize I’m mad about women!

The grave little girl couldn’t help smiling.

Another prisoner in the place by the window to which Rubin was trying to make his way stopped work and listened to Valentin approvingly.

Your love, I think, is purely theoretical, answered Rubin, his jaws moving as though languidly chewing.

And I madly love spending money!

Of which, however, you have—

So how can I be a bad engineer? Just think: To love women—different ones all the time—you have to have a lot of money! To have a lot of money, you have to earn a lot! To earn a lot of money, if you’re an engineer, you must have a brilliant command of your special field! Ha-ha! You grow pale!

Valentin’s elongated face was tilted provocatively at Rubin.

Got it! exclaimed the zek by the window, whose desk faced the young woman’s.

Got it, Lyovka! I’ve finally caught Valentin’s voice! It’s bell-like, that’s what it is! I’ll write it down, shall I? A voice like that you could recognize over any telephone. However much interference there was.

He opened out a big sheet of paper, on which there were columns of names with ruled squares beside them, and a tree diagram.

God, what a load of bull! Valentin made a gesture of disgust, seized his soldering iron, and set the rosin smoking.

The passageway was clear. Rubin took his seat and also applied himself to the classification of voices.

For some time they examined the chart together without speaking.

We’re making progress, Glebka, Rubin said at last. Used in conjunction with ‘visible speech,’ we’ve got a useful weapon here. Before very long we shall know, you and I, what determines the quality of a voice on the telephone. . . . What’s that on the radio?

The loudest noise in the room was jazz, but where they were, a torrent of piano music from the homemade receiver on the windowsill could be heard above it. A single melody surfaced repeatedly, was swept away in the flood, and reemerged only to be overwhelmed again.

Beethoven’s Sonata No. 17, Gleb replied. One I’ve never really . . . Just listen.

They bent their heads toward the receiver, but the jazz made listening very difficult.

"Valen-tine! Gleb said. Do us a favor! Show us how bighearted you are!"

I’ve shown you already, Valentin snapped. Who set up that receiver for you? If I unsolder your coil, that’ll be the end of it!

The slip of a girl raised her eyebrows sternly and intervened. Valentin Martynych! It really is impossible! We can’t listen to three radios at once. Switch yours off—please.

(As it happened, Valentin’s radio was playing a slow foxtrot, and the girl was enjoying it.)

Serafima Vitalievna! This is monstrous! Valentin bumped into an empty chair, tilted it at an angle, and gesticulated as if he were addressing a public meeting. How can a normal healthy human being not like lively, invigorating Western popular music? You are poisoned here with all sorts of rubbish. You must, surely, have danced the Blue Tango? Surely you’ve seen Arkady Raikin’s reviews? Ah, but you’ve never been in Europe either! How could you possibly learn how to live? I do most earnestly advise you to fall in love with somebody soon!

He held forth over the chair back, not noticing the bitter lines round the young woman’s mouth. "Somebody, anybody—ça dépend! Lights twinkling in the night! The rustle of silken gowns!"

He’s out of sync again! Rubin said in alarm. We must exercise our authority.

He reached behind Valentin’s back and switched off his radio.

Valentin spun around as if he had been stung.

Lev Grigorievich! What gives you the right—?

The limpid melody of Sonata No. 17 poured out unhindered, competing now only with the rather crude song from the far corner.

Rubin’s frame was blissfully relaxed; his face was a pair of mild hazel eyes over a beard with cake crumbs.

Engineer Pryanchikov! Do you remember the Atlantic Charter? Have you made your will yet? To whom have you left your bedroom slippers?

Valentin’s face grew serious. He stared into Rubin’s eyes and asked quietly: Listen, what the hell d’you think you’re doing? Can’t a man feel free even in prison? If there’s no freedom there, where can he expect to find it?

One of the fitters called him over, and he went off despondently.

Rubin sank noiselessly into his chair, back-to-back with Gleb, and settled down to listen, but the soothing cadences broke off suddenly, like a speech interrupted in mid-sentence—and that was the modest and unostentatious conclusion of Sonata No. 17.

Rubin swore obscenely, for Gleb’s ears only.

Spell it, Gleb answered, still sitting with his back to Rubin. I can’t hear you.

I said just my luck, Rubin answered hoarsely, also without turning round. Now I’ve missed that sonata. I’d never heard it before.

Because you’re so disorganized, shall I ever get it into your head! his friend grumbled. And a very good sonata it is, too! Did you notice how it ends? No noise, not a whisper. It breaks off abruptly—and that’s that. Just like in real life. . . . Where were you earlier?

With the Germans. Christmas party, said Rubin with a laugh.

They carried on their conversation, invisible to each other, but almost resting the backs of their heads on each other’s shoulders.

Good for you. Gleb thought a while. I like your attitude to them. You spend hours teaching Max Russian, though you’d be perfectly entitled to hate them.

Hate them? No. But of course, the love I used to feel for them is clouded. Max is a gentle chap, and no Nazi, but doesn’t even he share responsibility with the hangmen? After all, he didn’t try to stop them, did he?

No. Just as you and I do nothing to stop Abakumov or Shishkin-Myshkin.

You know, Glebka, when you come to think of it, I’m as much Russian as Jew. And as much a citizen of the world as I am a Russian.

I like that. Citizens of the world! It has a clean, unbloodied sound!

In other words we’re cosmopolitans. So they were right to lock us up.

Of course they were. Although you keep trying to convince the Supreme Court of the opposite.

The radio on the windowsill announced: Logbook of Socialist Emulation in half a minute.

Half a minute was long enough for Gleb’s hand to move with unhurried efficiency to the receiver and, before the announcer could get a single croak out, switch it off as though wringing his neck. His face, no longer animated, looked gray and tired.

Pryanchikov was grappling with another problem, calculating how to mount a serial amplifier—and lightheartedly singing, Boogie-woogie, boogie-woogie. Samba! Samba!

Chapter 6

A Peaceful Existence

GLEB NERZHIN WAS THE SAME AGE as Pryanchikov but looked older. His auburn hair, parted in the middle, was still thick, but there were crow’s feet around his eyes, little wrinkles around his mouth, and furrows across his brow. His skin was affected by the lack of fresh air, and his face had a wilted look. But what above all made him seem older was the economy of his movements: that economy by which nature conserves the flagging strength of prisoners in the camp. In the sharashka, with meat on the menu and work that overstrained no one’s muscles, Nerzhin, with the length of his sentence in mind, was nonetheless trying to make a habit of minimal movement.

At present, Nerzhin’s desk was barricaded with piles of books and files, and the working space in between had also been taken over by files, typescripts, books, and journals, Russian and foreign, all left open. Any unsuspecting outsider would have seen the stillness after a hurricane of scientific thought.

But it was all camouflage. Nerzhin always put up a front in the evening in case one of the bosses looked in.

In fact, he had no eyes for anything before him. He had pulled back the light silk curtain and was staring through the dark windowpane. In the depths of the vast night, big patches of light marked the outskirts of Moscow, and from the city itself, hidden behind a hill, rose an immense haze of diffused, pale light, which gave the sky above it a dull reddish glow.

Nerzhin’s special chair, with its flexible back, his rolltop desk—something not made in the Soviet Union—and his comfortable place by the south window would have revealed him to anyone familiar with the history of the Marfino sharashka as one of its founding members.

The sharashka had taken its name from what had once been the village of Marfino but was now territory within the city limits. The sharashka had been inaugurated some three years ago on a July evening. A dozen or so zeks, summoned from the camps, were driven to what had once been a seminary, just outside Moscow. The building had been fenced around with barbed wire in readiness. That was remembered as an idyllic age: You could switch on the BBC loud in the prisoners’ living quarters (no one yet knew how to jam it), you could stroll about the zone in the evening without asking permission, you could lie in the dewy grass, left uncut, contrary to regulations (it is supposed to be cropped close so that you cannot crawl through it to the wire), and you could observe the eternal stars or the perishable Sergeant Major Zhvakun on night duty and all in a sweat, steal timber from a building under repair and slide it under the barbed wire to take home for firewood.

The sharashka did not yet know what direction its research was to take and occupied itself unpacking numerous crates, three trainloads of them from Germany, staking claims to comfortable German chairs and desks, and sorting out equipment for telecommunications, ultrashortwave radio, and acoustics. Much of it was obsolete or had been damaged in transit. And the sharashka gradually realized that the Germans had purloined or destroyed the best of the equipment and the most recent documentation, while the MVD* captain sent to relocate the Lorenz factory, an expert on furniture but not on radio or the German language, spent his time in and around Berlin searching out elegant pieces for his own Moscow apartment and those of his superiors.

The grass had been mowed long ago, the doors now opened for the prisoners to take exercise only when a bell rang, and the sharashka, transferred from Beria’s to Abakumov’s jurisdiction, had been put to work on scrambler telephones. They had hoped to complete the assignment within a year, but it had dragged on for two years, expanding and becoming more and more complicated as new lines of inquiry multiplied. On Rubin’s and Nerzhin’s desks it had reduced itself to the problem of identifying voices on the telephone, which meant determining what makes a person’s voice unique. Apparently no one had done anything of the sort before. At any rate, they had come across no relevant published work. They had been given six months to complete their task, then another six, but they had still made little progress, and the deadline was alarmingly close.

Uncomfortably aware as he was of this pressure, Rubin nonetheless grumbled over his shoulder: I somehow don’t feel a bit like working today.

You amaze me, Nerzhin retorted. A mere four years at the front and not quite five in jail, am I right? And already you’re tired! Better put in for a Crimean rest cure.

They were silent for a while.

Working on your own thing, aren’t you? Rubin asked quietly.

Uh-huh.

So who’s going to work on the voices?

To tell the truth, I was counting on you.

"What a coincidence. I was counting on you."

"You have no conscience. How many books have you checked out of the Lenin Library, supposedly for this job? Speeches of famous lawyers. Koni’s memoirs. Improve Your Acting. And to crown it all you brazenly called for a work on Princess Turandot. Can any other zek in the Gulag boast of such a varied collection of books?"

Rubin’s thick lips protruded, which always made him look stupid:

Strange. With whom did I read all those books during working hours—including the one about Princess Turandot? Could it have been you?

Well, I do want to work. I could lose myself completely in my work today but for two little things. Number one, I’m agonizing over the parquet floors question.

What parquet floors?

In the MVD house, on Kaluzhskaya Zastava, the semicircular building with the tower. Our camp helped build it in ’45, and I was employed as a parquet floor layer’s apprentice. I learned today that Roitman happens to live in that very house. And I began to feel an artist’s pangs of conscience, or maybe I’m just worried about my reputation. What I wonder is whether my floorboards creak or not. If they do, it may mean that I did a slovenly job. And I’m powerless to put it right!

D’you know, that would make a good play!

For a socialist-realist playwright. The second thing is: Isn’t it infuriating to be working on Saturday evening when you know that only the free employees get Sunday off?

Rubin sighed. The frees have already peeled off to various places of entertainment. Making pigs of themselves.

But do they choose the right places of entertainment? Do they get more out of life than we do? That’s a moot point.

Prisoners, of necessity, learn to talk quietly, and even Serafima Vitalievna, sitting opposite Nerzhin, was not supposed to hear them. They had both turned their backs to the room and sat facing the window, the lights in the prison grounds, the guard tower dimly discernible in the darkness, scattered lights in distant greenhouses, and the whitish haze over Moscow.

Nerzhin was a mathematician but no stranger to linguistics, and ever since the phonology of Russian speech had become the subject of the Marfino sharashka’s research, he had been paired with Rubin, the only linguist in the place. For two years they had sat together, back-to-back, twelve hours a day. They had discovered at once that they had both fought at the same time first on the northwestern front, then on the Belorussian front; both possessed the gentleman’s junior medal set; both had been arrested in the same month by the very same SMERSH**; both of them had been charged under the universally popular point Ten; and both had been given a tenner (not that this made them different from anyone else). There was a slight age difference—six years—and Nerzhin, a captain, was one step lower in rank.

Rubin was favorably disposed to Nerzhin because he had not been jailed as a former prisoner of war and so was not infected with the anti-Soviet spirit of abroad. Nerzhin was one of us, a Soviet man, only he had spent his whole youth poring over books, reading himself silly, and had got it into his muddled head that Stalin had distorted Leninism. No sooner had Nerzhin recorded this conclusion on a scrap of paper than he was arrested. Shell-shocked by jail and labor camp, Nerzhin had nonetheless remained at bottom one of us, and so Rubin had the patience to listen to the confused and nonsensical thoughts that were all he had for the time being.

They looked out into the darkness again.

Rubin made an impatient noise.

You really are an intellectual pauper. It worries me.

I’m not competing. There’s a lot of cleverness in the world but not much goodness.

Well, here’s a good book for you. Read it.

Another one about the poor bamboozled bulls?

No.

About stalking lions, then?

Certainly not.

I can’t make sense of people. What do I want with bulls?

You have to read it!

I don’t have to do anything! For anybody! For you or anybody else! Duties duly discharged, as Spiridon says.

You pathetic person! It’s one of the best books of the twentieth century!

And will it really tell me what we all need to know? Where humanity went wrong?

He’s a clever, goodhearted, infinitely honest writer—soldier, hunter, fisherman, drunk, womanizer—coolly and sincerely contemptuous of all that’s false, a stickler for simplicity, utterly humane, with the naïveté of genius. . . .

Spare me the rest! Nerzhin said with a laugh. You’ll give me an earache with your spiel. I’ve lived for thirty years without Hemingway, and I expect to go on a bit longer. My life’s in tatters anyway. I need to limit myself! Find my own way. . . .

He turned back toward his own desk.

Rubin sighed. He still did not feel like working.

He began studying a map of China propped up against a shelf at the back of his desk. He had cut this map out of a newspaper and pasted it onto a piece of cardboard.

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