Arthur Ransome Trust

Putting Ransome on the Map

Six Weeks in Russia in 1919

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Information about Six Weeks in Russia in 1919, by Arthur Ransome.


Six Weeks in Russia is Arthur Ransome’s 18th published book. This page contains publication, availability, background and contents information.

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First Publication

Published by George Allen & Unwin, Ltd in June, 1919.

Availability

In print. Faber Finds (2010) ISBN 9780571269068

Background

In August, 1918, censorship and civil war forced Ransome to leave Russia for Stockholm. He remained there until January, 1919, when the Swedes expelled him. The Soviet Government then allowed him to return to Russia, where he spent February and March, gathering material for a history of the Russian Revolution and a report for the British Government.

The little book makes no claim to knowledge of politics or economics, but it does give a fair picture of what Moscow was like in those days of starvation, high hope and unwanted war.

Ransome never completed a full history of the Russian Revolution. But on his return to Britain he persuaded Stanley Unwin to publish a book on Russian affairs. In this work, Ransome was determined “to counteract the misinformation which seemed to me to have launched us on a course that must end in disaster” – ie the British Government’s policy of military intervention in the Russian Civil War.

He wrote Six Weeks in Russia (and his report for the Foreign Office) in 19 days, working sixteen hours a day at his mother’s house in Leeds. It proved very popular with readers, and reather less popular with the Foreign Office. More significantly it impressed C P Scott, the editor of the Manchester Guardian, who subsequently hired Ransome as his corrspondant in Russia.