I just finished Red Plenty by Francis Spufford, which I bought because of this review on Slate Star Codex. It was a thoroughly enjoyable and interesting mix of history and fiction about the Soviet Union in the late 1950′s and early 1960′s, when it was actually plausible to hope that politicians and scientists could get central planning right and build an economy that provided a first-world standard of living to everyone. (Spoiler alert) it doesn’t work out, and Red Plenty gives you a good look at how and why it failed.
I’m not usually a person given to intense patriotic emotions; I don’t get choked up when “The Star Spangled Banner” is played or anything. But as an interesting side effect of reading this book, I love America a lot right now. I’m in the mood of people who get off planes and kiss the ground.
I just finished Red Plenty by Francis Spufford, which I bought because of this review on Slate Star Codex. It was a thoroughly enjoyable and interesting mix of history and fiction about the Soviet Union in the late 1950′s and early 1960′s, when it was actually plausible to hope that politicians and scientists could get central planning right and build an economy that provided a first-world standard of living to everyone. (Spoiler alert) it doesn’t work out, and Red Plenty gives you a good look at how and why it failed.
I’m not usually a person given to intense patriotic emotions; I don’t get choked up when “The Star Spangled Banner” is played or anything. But as an interesting side effect of reading this book, I love America a lot right now. I’m in the mood of people who get off planes and kiss the ground.