Abstract
This essay focuses on Bloodlands, Timothy Snyder's analysis of Stalinism, Nazism and their consequences for the transnational territory between Berlin and Moscow from 1932 to 1945. The author concludes that Bloodlands does not add anything new to historians’ knowledge of the nature of Stalinism, but it does bring valuable attention to the cruelty of life under Stalin in this area. The author also notes that Snyder leaves out of his book vital areas affected by Stalin's terror
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