He would be imprisoned again in April for publishing abroad Conversations with Stalin, which became another international success and Đilas personally considered his greatest work (see Rise and Fall). Conversations with Stalin was written in after his release, though it had long been on his mind before (Rise and Fall, p. ). The manuscript was not smuggled out of prison, as it has been . Djilas, Milovan (). Conversations with Stalin. Translated by Petrovich, Michael B. London: Rupert Hart-Davis. OCLC Fleming, Thomas (). Montenegro: The Divided Land. Rockford, Illinois: Chronicles Press. ISBN Hall, Richard C. (). · Susreti sa Staljinom by Milovan Đilas, Molovan Dilas, unknown edition, Conversations with Stalin [1st ed.] This edition was published in by Harcourt, Brace World in New York. Edition Notes Translation of Susreti sa Staljinom. Classifications Dewey Decimal Class Pages:
Conversations with Stalin (Milovan Đilas, ) The Auschwitz Escape (Joel C. Rosenberg, ) - historical fiction. Five Days That Shocked the World: Eyewitness Accounts from Europe at the End of World War II (Nicholas Best, ) A Memoir (Leni Riefenstahl, ) With Hitler to the End: The Memoirs of Adolf Hitler's Valet (Heinz Linge, ). 5 quotes from Milovan Đilas: 'Tyranny over the mind is the most complete and most brutal type of tyranny; every other tyranny begins and ends with it.', 'Better to be an honourable man than a minister of state.', and 'Nisam imao namjeru nikoga posjećivati. Ali nakon onoga što sam tamo vidio, Foča je kod mene izazvala veliki šok, u negativnom smislu. Conversations with Stalin by Milovan Djilas ISBN ISBN Trade Paper; New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, ; ISBN
About the author () Until his expulsion from the Communist party in , Milovan Djilas was a vice-president of Yugoslavia and one of Tito's three highest aides. He was imprisoned by the Yugoslavian government from to and was returned to prison in because of the publication of Conversations with Stalin. He would be imprisoned again in April for publishing abroad Conversations with Stalin, which became another international success and Đilas personally considered his greatest work (see Rise and Fall). Conversations with Stalin was written in after his release, though it had long been on his mind before (Rise and Fall, p. ). The manuscript was not smuggled out of prison, as it has been stated, including by David Pryce-Jones in "Remembering Milovan Djilas" (see below the external. Conversations with Stalin offers an interesting insight into the inner workings of the Soviet system, and their relations with the eastern block in the immediate aftermath of the war, in particular of course with Yugoslavia. Đilas marks the start of the deterioration of Soviet-Yugoslav relations with his inquiries into the actions of the Red Army in Belgrade, though points out earlier examples of differences between the two existed even from , quoting Tito as having said “our first.
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