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Darkness at Noon - Community Reviews back

by Arthur Koestler, Daphne Hardy
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bobsburgers23
bobsburgers23 rated it 10 years ago
Nice book about the madness of the purges and the radical logic of the revolutionaries.
shell pebble
shell pebble rated it 11 years ago
A fiercely intelligent examination of the thought behind ruthless totalitarian communism through the account of a former Party Commissioner who is arrested and interrogated by a member of the younger generation, a native of the revolution.It seems to me that Koestler has set out to render a great se...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 11 years ago
bookshelves: published-1940, slavic, classic, fraudio, holocaust-genocide, lifestyles-deathstyles, philosophy, psychology, recreational-homicide, teh-brillianz, translation Read in November, 2009 Unabridged and read by Frank Muller. Highly Kafkaesque in tone insomuch as it's bleak, dark humoure...
2020
2020 rated it 12 years ago
A recent re-reading of Darkness At Noon didn't live up to my memory of it from many years ago. The prison descriptions were excellent, in a claustrophobic way, and the inner workings of Rubashov's mind in an effort to keep his sanity were riveting indeed. But the long political discourses about "t...
jbradway
jbradway rated it 13 years ago
Darkness at Noon is one of a class of novels, mostly prison and interrogation things, in which all is just so hopelessly restrictive and cramped - so lacking in even the smallest victories.So, it's not fun. And it's not particularly new.Koestler, though, was an early-adopter communist who had suffer...
JulieM
JulieM rated it 13 years ago
A powerful book about the Stalinist purges during the 1930's. The main character, Comrade Rubashov is one of the diehard members of the party, a Communist since his youth who has been decorated many times for his devotion to the party and Mother Russia. Now in his 50's he has been arrested and is ...
A Cruel Man Delighting in Flowers
A Cruel Man Delighting in Flowers rated it 14 years ago
A joy to read and an important book in a very genuine way: both in its original historical context and, perhaps, for good. While Koestler uses more 'real world' dynamics than his firend Orwell did in '1984', both explore the problems of revolution and modern revolutionary politics. While Orwell's ch...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 15 years ago
Unabridged and read by Frank Muller. Highly Kafkaesque in tone insomuch as it's bleak, dark humoured, absurd and ultimately lethal; highly Dosteoveskyish in the mental ramblings and philosophysing of a murderer. Did the system make him a murderer? What do they say? "Justification is worse than the o...
Manny Rayner's book reviews
Manny Rayner's book reviews rated it 16 years ago
An Announcement Concerning the Class Traitor NotAfter a scrupulously fair trial in the Amazon People's Court, Comrade Not has been found guilty of posting an ideologically unsound review. To protect other comrades from the possibility of being seduced into thought-crime, the review has now been remo...
"Check Six"
"Check Six" rated it 17 years ago
I actually got through about half of the book and stopped. Always wanted to go back and finish it. Hope to.
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