Book review: The Death of Trotsky
Several years ago, I read Isaac Deutcher’s monumental three-volume biography of Leon Trotsky. Naturally, it included an account of Trotsky’s assassination. I’ve also read a couple of Stalin biographies and Richard Pipes’ “The Russian Revolution.” I don’t recall how “ The Death of Trotsky: The True Story of the Plot to Kill Stalin's Greatest Enemy” by Josh Ireland came to my attention; probably a review in New York Review of Books or The New Yorker. Ireland turns the history of Trotsky’s murder into a book-length narrative by drawing on the various threads of Trotsky’s biography, the biography of his assassin, Ramón Mercader , and the contemporary events and personalities of people in their orbits. These are all woven together in a style more commonly found in novels. The weather, sights and smells, landscapes, and personal quirks of characters are described in vivid detail. This gives the story a pacing and color absent from most histories. In several places, I found t...