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The Red Hotel

The Untold Story of Stalin’s Disinformation War

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The Red Hotel

By: Alan Philps
Narrated by: Nathaniel Priestley
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About this listen

In THE RED HOTEL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF STALIN'S DISINFORMATION WAR, former Daily Telegraph Foreign Editor and Russian expert Alan Philps sets out the way Stalin created his own reality by constraining and muzzling the British and American reporters covering the Eastern front during the war and forcing them to reproduce Kremlin propaganda. War correspondents were both bullied and pampered in a gilded cage of the Metropol Hotel. They enjoyed lavish supplies of caviar and had their choice of young women to employ as translators and to share their beds.

While some of these translators turned journalists into robotic conveyors of Kremlin propaganda, others were brave secret dissenters who whispered to reporters the reality of Soviet life and were punished with sentences in the Gulag. Through the use of British archives and Russian sources, the story of the role of the women of the Metropol Hotel and the foreign reporters they worked with is told for the first time. With a riveting narrative very much in the same wheelhouse as Ben McIntyre's Agent Sonya, this revelatory story will finally lift the lid on Stalin's operation to muzzle and control what the western allies' writers and foreign correspondents knew of his regime's policies to prosecute the war against Hitler's rampaging armies from June 1941 onwards.

©2023 Alan Philps (P)2023 Headline Publishing Group Ltd
Elections & Political Process Europe Military Politics & Government War Russia Western Europe Stalin Soviet Union Imperialism

Critic reviews

A fabulous book, packed with untold stories, written with the lyrical empathy of an author who knows and feels his subject deeply (Patrick Bishop)
All stars
Most relevant
A great insight into Stalin’s Soviet Union during WW2 and after. The writer is quite humble, and I mean that as a compliment, as he looks to describe the enormity of the cruelty and madness that occurred over those years.

Excellent account and beautifully read

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Very well written book, great for filling in gaps in the lives of Russian people in the Stalinist period. Fascinating to read about the Russians helping the journalists in the Metropole hotel.

Excellent book, great listen

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A great book that typifies the USSR from the early 20th century and now into the 21st.

People led by dictatorship and criminal minds.

Unfortunately it will never change unless something tragic happens.

Comunist Blundering.

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