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Gouzenko, Igor «The Fall of a Titan», 1954
Kravchenko, Viktor «I Chose Freedom», 1946; «Ich wahlte die Freiheit», Hamburg 1946
Krivitsky, General Walter «In Stalin’s Secret Service», 1939
Lyons, Eugene «Our Secret Allies: The Russian Peoples», New ork 1953
Melgounov, S.P. «La Terreur rouge en Russie (1918-1924)», Paris 1927
(французский перевод русск. оригинала «Красный террор»); «The Red Terror in Russia», London 1926 (англ. перев.)
Myagkow, Alexis «Inside the K.G.B.», London 1976; «Un officier du KGB parle», Paris 1977 (франц. перев.)
Poncinc, Vicomte Leon de «Histoire du communisme de 1917 a la deuxieme guerre mondiale», Chire-en-Montreuil 1973
Reports, Collection of; Bolshevism in Russia. British Government’s Stationary Office, 1919
«Report of the Canadian overnment Royal Commission», 1946
Rounds, Frank «A Window on Red Square», 1953
Шульгин, В.В. «Что нам в них не нравится», Париж 1930 (переиздано заново)
Солженицын, Александр «Архипелаг ГУЛАГ» в 3-х томах, Париж 1973
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander «The GULAG Archipelago», 1974
Tolstoy, Nicholas «Victims of Yalta», 1977
Voslensky, Michael «Nomenklatura. Die herschedene Klasse der
Sowjetunion», Wien-Munchen-Zurich 1980
Zawodny, J.K. «Death in the Forest», 1962
Douglas Reed
Douglas Reed (1895—1976) was a journalist, playwright, novelist, and author of a number of books on political analysis. His book Insanity Fair (1938) was one of the most influential in publicising the state of Europe and the megalomania of Adolf Hitler before the war. According to his obituary in The Times, Reed was a «virulent anti-Semite.»
Biography
At the age of 13, Reed began working as an office boy, and at 19 a bank clerk. At the outbreak of the First World War he enlisted in the British Army. Around 1921 he began working as a telephonist and clerk for The Times. At the age of 30, he became a sub-editor. In 1927 he became assistant correspondent in Berlin, he then transferred to Vienna as chief central European correspondent. He went on to report from various European centres including Warsaw, Moscow, Prague, Athens, Sofia, Bucharest, and Budapest.
According to Reed, he resigned from his job by expostulant letter in protest of appeasement of Hitler after the Munich Agreement of 1938. Following the Second World War, Reed retired to Durban, South Africa.
Richard Thurlow noted that Reed was one of the first antisemitic writers to deny Hitler's persecution of the Jews.
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