Martin Amis’s
Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million(2002) is his sixth nonfiction work. It is
an impassioned record of his horrified reactions to reading “several yards of books” (4) about Stalinism, and an attack on the participants in “the great intellectual abasement” (38) – the denial or diminution of the scale and nature of the atrocities perpetrated by Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) and/or the claim that Vladimir Lenin (1870-1924) and Leon Trotsky (1879-1940) were significantly better than Stalin. The main title of
Koba the Dreadcomes from Stalin’s own nickname for himself as a boy, Koba, after a Robin Hood figure in a popular novel called
The Patricide, and from the Russian word “grozny”, applied to Ivan IV (1530-84) and more usually translated as…
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Citation: Tredell, Nicolas. "Koba, The Dread". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 08 December 2011 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=10379, accessed 27 November 2024.]