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"The greatest and most powerful single indictment of a political regime ever to be leveled in modern times". New York Review of Books
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"Solzhenitsyn can and must proclaim that the automatism of oppression can be arrested, because he has seen it arrested or, at least, ground to temporary impotence. ... This is the testimony of the final volume in the trilogy, with its enthralling record of camp uprisings, of escapes, of defiance by individuals and groups of victims. ... In poignant closing chapters, he recalls his own resurrection from the house of the dead, his own reentry, at once agonizing and joyous, into the habitual daylight of more or less normal, licensed existence". The New Yorker
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