From the Front Line: Stalingrad-Treblinka-Berlin, 1941-45
New York Review of Books, 2026.
New Book.Item #34277
ISBN: 9798896230083
Paperback. 512 pp.
War reporting from one of Russia's greatest writers, an indispensable record of World War II and the Eastern Front.
June 22, 1941: Launch of Operation Barbarossa. Hitler invades the Soviet Union. Vasily Grossman soon begins a new career as a war reporter.
During the next four years, he covered all the major battles of the Eastern Front, from Stalingrad to Berlin, writing brutally vivid reports that were read by millions of soldiers and civilians alike. And as the war drew to a close, he was one of the first to expose the horrors of the Treblinka death camp.
Grossman had a remarkable memory and the ability to win the trust of men and women from all walks of life: snipers, generals, fighter pilots, peasants, soldiers in a Soviet penal battalion, and German prisoners of war. Not many reporters are able to write so vividly, and with such understanding, about world-changing events while they are still unfolding.
This collection brings together the best of the forty-nine articles Grossman wrote for the Red Star newspaper, many in newly unearthed versions that have not been distorted by censors. It is still a vital record of a deadly time.
Vasily Semyonovich Grossman (1905-1964) worked as a reporter for the army newspaper Red Star during WWII, covering nearly all of the most important battles from the defense of Moscow to the fall of Berlin. NYRB Classics publishes Grossman's Stalingrad, Life and Fate, The Road, Everything Flows, An Armenian Sketchbook, and The People Immortal.
Price: $24.95
See all items by Vasily Grossman