But what if he had never arrived?
In 'The Limpid Stream' Jack Tindale postulates a world where Lenin's assassination on his arrival at Finland Station leads to a very different Russian Revolution. With the Bolshevik cause robbed of its most charismatic leader, a very different nation emerges. From the bumbling actions of Alexander Kerensky, to the autocratic modernisation of Pyotr Wrangel, to the staunch liberalism of a very different Ayn Rand, 'The Limpid Stream' shows a vision of a very different 20th Century.
Reviews
- "A complex counterfactual - in some respects this is a better world than ours, in others it isn't."
- "Being a Russophile myself, it was great to see all the characters used."
- "Excellent work. Very plausible."