A family history that explores the KGB, the fur trade, Freud and the assassination of Trotsky Leonid Eitingon was a KGB assassin who dedicated his life to the Soviet regime. He was in China in the early 1920s, in Turkey in the late 1920s, in Spain during the Civil War, and, crucially, in Mexico, helping to organize the assassination of Trotsky. “As long as I live,” Stalin said, “not a hair of his head shall be touched.” It did not work out like that. Max Eitingon was a psychoanalyst, a colleague, friend and protégé of Freud’s. He was rich, secretive and—through his friendship with a famous Russian singer— implicated in the abduction of a white Russian general in Paris in 1937. Motty Eitingon was a New York fur dealer whose connections with the Soviet Union made him the largest trader in the world. Imprisoned by the Bolsheviks, questioned by the FBI. Was Motty everybody’s friend or everybody’s enemy? Mary-Kay Wilmers, best known as the editor of the London Review of Books, began looking into aspects of her remarkable family twenty years ago. The result is a book of astonishing scope and thrilling originality that throws light into some of the darkest corners of the last century. At the center of the story stands the author herself—ironic, precise, searching, and stylish—wondering not only about where she is from, but about what she’s entitled to know.
As a concession to the summer, on a particularly hot day he would take off his jacket. British summers being generally on the tepid side, however, the jacket usually stayed on. In the late 1950s, after the Morris finally packed it in, ...
Underlying all these essays is a concern with the relation between the genders: the effect men have on women, and the ways in which men limit and frame women’s lives.
Lukash used to come to the home of the Eitingons, and knows that they were not busy there with politics and commerce. Anyway the content of my book itself shows that an “admirer” or a “worker” of the Communists would not publish such ...
But investigators later acquired records of phone calls between the Skoblins and the Eitingons in September 1937 (copies of which Ribet showed the court in a subsequent hearing) and collected witness testimony confirming that the ...
Drawing on a wealth of declassified Soviet archives, this is a major biography of one of the greatest spies who ever lived.
See Mary-Kay Wilmers (a relative of Eitingon), The Eitingons: A TwentiethCentury Story (London: Faber and Faber, 2009), 266. Sudoplatov and Sudoplatov, Special Tasks, 34. Sudoplatov had been Eitingon's friend and immediate superior for ...
The two meanwhile next met after Vienna when they stayed together at the Eitingons' in Berlin for the psychoanalytical congress on September 1922,” then in 1925 on the Freuds' summer holiday in the Semmering, and a last time—after Freud ...
Drawing on a huge range of sources - letters, memoirs, conversations - Orlando Figes tells the story of how Russians tried to endure life under Stalin.
She has learned to forgive, but she can never forget. And neither can we. Gerty Spies was born in 1897 at Trier into a Jewish family whose ancestors had lived in Germany for centuries.
Freud's Mexico is a completely unexpected contribution to Freud studies.