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...regional capital, to study mathematics at the Oryol Pedagogical Institute, where he set himself on a fast track to a party career by leading both the student union and the local branch of the Komsomol Communist youth organization. Svetlana Voronina, a former classmate, remembers him as a voracious reader. ''Every book I bought on trips to Moscow, he wanted to read," she says. One Zyuganov favorite was a book titled Raising Children in the Atheist Manner. Mindful of his nationalist supporters, for whom the Orthodox Church is inextricably linked to Russia's identity, Zyuganov now brags about having read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA'96: GENNADI ZYUGANOV: A COMMUNIST TO HIS ROOTS | 5/27/1996 | See Source »

...this criminality, the story is claustrophobic and actionless, woefully deficient in gunfights and car chases. What the author proves here is that when reader and jury are sequestered for 400 pages, the likely result is mutiny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THE RUNAWAY PLOT LINE | 5/27/1996 | See Source »

...terrible night in 1968 Douglass Adair, then a teacher at the Claremont colleges, walked into their bedroom and killed himself. His widow's agony and incomprehension, in poems reflecting lost love, all but leap from page to reader's eye. "One Ordinary Evening" revisits a moment of marital intimacy: entwined on a sofa, they listen to Wagner on the phonograph. Then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: ELEGANT FIZZ BY A POETS' POET | 5/27/1996 | See Source »

...writing, like his, has the elegant fizz of brut champagne." One terrible night in 1968 Douglass Adair, then a teacher at the Claremont colleges, walked into their bedroom and killed himself. His widow's agony and incomprehension, in poems reflecting lost love, all but leap from page to reader...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Doing Well By Doing Good' | 5/19/1996 | See Source »

...that it has become as common for a serious reader to read literary biographies as actual novels, is only a matter of time until even moderately famous writers get the full biographical treatment. The last year saw new biographies of Antoine de St.-Exupery, Andre Breton, and William Morris, to name just a few. And truly major writers are guaranteed at least a handful of encyclopedia-length biographies--three new books on Thomas Mann appeared in the space of a few months last summer...

Author: By Adam Kirsch, | Title: Stalin's Not-So-Willing Propagandist | 5/17/1996 | See Source »

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