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In the Shadow of Stalin: The Story of Mr. Jones
In the Shadow of Stalin: The Story of Mr. Jones | Andrea Chalupa
1 post | 1 read
"A rousing yet haunting portrait of journalistic idealism." --Publishers Weekly Can the unrelenting power of truth expose one of Stalin's greatest crimes to a world that refuses to bear witness? From journalist and screenwriter Andrea Chalupa (host of the hit podcast Gaslit Nation and writer of Orwell and the Refugees: The Untold Story of Animal Farm) and artist Ivan Rodrigues, this powerful new historical graphic novel reexamines the bravery and tragedy that first thrust Ukraine in the international spotlight in the years before World War II. In the early 1930s, Gareth Jones is a young journalist with powerful connections after a groundbreaking interview with Adolf Hitler and his chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels. This notoriety gains him permission to travel to the Soviet Union for a potential interview with Joseph Stalin. Jones hopes to learn more about the Soviets mass economic gains but finds himself stonewalled and trapped in Moscow. While looking for a way out, he meets new allies that alert him to the growing man-made famine, or Holodomor, happening in Ukraine under the government's guidance. Jones, seeking the truth in all its ugliness, embarks on a journey of discovery, strife, and a cover-up of the deaths of millions of people.
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review
psalva
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Mehso-so

A graphic novelization of a fascinating historical occurrence, this tells the story of Gareth Jones, a Welsh freelance journalist who broke the story of the man-made famine in Ukraine in 1933. This depicts the intrigue Jones faced, including a cover up by western journalists like Pulitzer Prize winner Walter Duranty. It‘s a pretty straightforward telling and conveys the story well, but I don‘t think this was the ideal medium for it. ⬇️

psalva The art was fine but I don‘t think it added to what would have been a good story no matter what. I would have preferred a detailed well-researched nonfiction book with deeper explanations of the context. Still, a passable introduction to a chapter in history I am sorely under-informed about. 4w
psalva Incidentally, Jones shared a literary agent with George Orwell! 4w
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