Hungary Hotels Travel :: Journey to a Revolution: A Personal Memoir and History of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956


Journey to a Revolution: A Personal Memoir and History of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956

Journey to a Revolution: A Personal Memoir and History of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956
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Manufacturer: HarperCollins
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5

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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 943.9052
Format: Bargain Price
Label: HarperCollins
Manufacturer: HarperCollins
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 240
Publication Date: 2006-09-01
Publisher: HarperCollins
Release Date: 2006-09-19
Studio: HarperCollins

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Editorial Reviews:

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was perhaps the most dramatic single event of the Cold War and a major turning point in history. Though it ended unsuccessfully, the spontaneous uprising of Hungarians against their country's Communist party and the Soviet occupation forces in the wake of Stalin's death demonstrated to the world at large the failure of Communism. In full view of the Western media—and therefore the world—the Russians were obliged to use force on a vast scale to subdue armed students, factory workers, and intellectuals in the streets of a major European capital.

In October 1956, Michael Korda and three fellow Oxford undergraduates traveled to Budapest in a beat-up Volkswagen to bring badly needed medicine to the hospitals—and to participate, at street level, in one of the great battles of the postwar era. Journey to a Revolution is at once history and a compelling memoir—the author's riveting account of the course of the revolution, from its heroic beginnings to the sad martyrdom of its end.




Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Great book
Comment: I recommend this enlightening and fun narrative of Korda's trip to Budapest as a great starting point in learning about the attempted revolution. While it surely lacks detailed information on policy and Cold War era geopolitical relations, it gives a great sense of what it was like to actually be there. Reading it makes me jealous of Korda's bold trip to a historical event like this. Buy this book for anyone, particularly an adventursome older child, or any reader who enjoys history. It is too bad that European history in the U.S. is taught only about England and France mainly. The Eastern countries have a history that's just as rich and more interesting. However I didn't even know about the revolution until I visited Budapest, and in college I still have to really seek out information on Hungary. This is the type of book that if more people read could break that unfairness and get more students to understand this increasingly important and beautiful country's past.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Journey to a Revolution
Comment: I'm going to start off bluntly by saying...not my cup of tea. But I must admit, Michael Korda's Journey to a Revolution was definitely intelligently written. The language and style of the book was certainly a challenge for me (hint: I don't really read). It's very smart and the character has a good sense of humor considering what is going on around him. This novel truly takes the reader on a journey from beginning to end. Basically, in a nut shell, the book goes over the history of Hungary, a small country that has gone through a whole lot to reach the freedom it has reached today. Korda gives us great insight to events before, during and after the 1956 Revolution. The 1956 Revolution was a huge milestone for Hungary in the sense that it showed the great courage of the Hungarians not only fighting for their country but fighting alone. And even though a happy ending came years from then, this revolution helped bring down a power that thought it could take over the world. Using elaborate details, the reader learns about what a Hungarian really is, their pride and courage, and every detail about Hungary's fight for freedom.
Best of all, the author, also the main character, was a true eye witness. He really did go on this journey to Hungary and described the events as seen by his owns eyes. He lived and breathed the events he speaks about while he was in Hungary in the time where the freedom fighters had thought they had won the revolution. Who better to tell a tale then a person who lives to tell? He describes scenes such as dead bodies hanging from poles and smells such as burned fleshed and gasoline. It leaves no room for sugar coating; just straight forward to what is being witnessed. Korda, in the novel, was a privileged young man, who gathers a couple of friends and some much needed items and road trips to Hungary. He has a couple of scares on the way dealing with situations that could've gotten them killed. But he is very intelligent and finds his way out of trouble. For example, they made a stop for gas in a bad neighborhood and basically find themselves in a bar like restaurant with a pretty mean crowd. Knowing that they might get jumped if they mention anything about money, the narrator trades liquor for gas and heads out on his continued journey to their destination.
Aside from that, the novel is well researched and very matter-of-fact. Also, we learn about some events that were happening elsewhere that kept the world's eyes off what was going on in the streets of Hungary. It was even mentioned that these events were on purpose and the Russians took advantage of that, pulling the rug from under the Hungarian's feet. The book is just full of history that not many people take into account. Though I usually don't read books of this genre, I give major credit to the author for giving a plate of history with a side of wit.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Proud people, proud time
Comment: After a bunch of titles published by refugees in the sixties, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was largely ignored. Michener's Bridge at Andau remains the most passionate yet journalistic account of the revolt.
Now with the 50th anniversary just past interest is returning. Korda's book reviews not only the historical and political basis for the revolt of the Hungarians against the Soviet Union, but includes his personal involvement. After reading so many of the memories of those days, including those in a fine oral history archive at Columbia University, I can just imagine Korda driving into town with the farmers supplying food to the freedom fighters. Soul of Flesh: A Novel of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: The Hungarian revolution of 1956 really was the beginning of the end of the Soviet Union
Comment: It was an event of the magnitude of what occurred more than thirty years later in China in Tiananmen Square. But in 1956 there were no 24 hour cable news networks. There is precious little footage of what took place in Budapest in late October of 1956. It is safe to say however that the events that took place there during those 12 days would have a profound effect on the future of the Soviet Union. Author Michael Korda, then a 24 year old undergraduate at Oxford and a descendant of a prominent Hungarian family, journeyed to Budapest at the height of the revolution to bring much needed medical supplies and to experience first-hand what was happening in the streets of the capital city. "Journey to A Revolution" is Michael Korda's personal memoir of those dozen amazing days. It is at the same time an overview of Hungarian history and of the events that would ultimately lead an unlikely coalition of students, intellectuals and factory workers to attempt the unthinkable. For a precious few days it appeared for all the world that the revolution had succeeded. And while the Soviet Union would move quickly to crush the revolution and restore a hard-line Communist regime the damage had been done. The Soviet Union was no longer viewed by its client states as invincible and within just three short decades it would collapse of its own weight. The Soviets won this battle but would ultimately lose the war.
While I did enjoy learning more about the specifics of the Hungarian revolution I must agree with Publishers Weekly who found Michael Korda's account of these events as "strangely flat". I am also concerned about the comments of a number of other reviewers who seem to have found numerous factual errors in this book. While "Journey To A Revolution" is not an awful book it is certainly not something I would recommend to others. It would appear to me that if you are seeking a much more thorough and well researched account of these momentous events then you might opt for Victor Sebestyen's 2006 offering "Twelve Days: The Story of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution".

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: "No more 'comrades'!"
Comment: Uneven in coverage, but certainly readable and better written than I expected from a brief personal account- cum- history of (mostly) recent Hungary. Korda's own distinguished family background and his own military training as an interpreter in Russian as the Cold War heated up enriches his descriptions of how shells pass through an apartment, why bistros got their start, how a Molotov cocktail is shaken and stirred, why hussars were the rage in 19c armies, and how the autobahn petrol stations were spaced to match the tank capacity of a VW! And, more apropos, how Napoleon III redesigned wide straight Parisian avenues-- soon to be copied in other cities by European monarchies-- to aim artillery at restive crowds trying to revolt.

If you thrive on such details, often tangential but intriguingly selected, Korda's style will please you. Despite its errors, which did surprise me even as a "curious bystander." I add to those compiled two more: speakers of Finno-Ugric tongues do not converse in "the only non-Indo-European languages in Europe" (34). Basque survives from pre-IE times, unrelated to any other surviving language group. The letter Dr Hajnal wrote attesting to the delivery of the medical supplies has three instances in which a "silent correction" has been given to its transcription on p. 136 opposite the original note's reproduction. Inexplicably, the date is November 3rd on the note; the text has them arrive in Budapest on October 30-- the same day when they brought the medicine then to the doctor. No postdating of the letter is mentioned. No other time is given for a return visit to the hospital after the 30th, and certainly on November 3rd although it was the last day of the interim calm between the two battles Korda says nothing about a hospital visit or an encounter with the doctor. How primary evidence clashes with the narrative makes me wonder at who edited this.

He's stronger on his ability to fit the 1956 uprising into the Suez crisis, the position of the UN, and post-1956 events that led to the eventual melting of the Cold War. I wish he had explained more the colliding aims of the revolt by the workers, the students & intellectuals, and the army. It's now accepted that the revolt was for a gentler socialism (how far under a Communist ideology is not detailed by Korda) rather than a capitalist democracy. Korda rushes by these issues.

If you seek a dramatic personal tale of hairbreadth escapes and hilarious conversations under fire, you will only find Attila the prof discussing with Korda the merits of Waugh vs. Greene, admittedly while under bombing! The British students arrive after the first fight that gained control of the city by the rebels. They hide for their lives, understandably, during the counter-attack beginning November 4th, later making it to the British embassy for safety. There is inevitably a sense of Korda as a lagging witness to the actual revolution. Not to blame him, for he tells us what he knows. But he gets his story in the lull, the flash of time in which the Hungarians proclaimed their independent republic, in between the fights with the Soviets. As he begins his book, however, he reminds us that historical events are more easily understood when seen in the rear mirror rather than when they loom ahead and you're in the driver's seat!

Perhaps he could never be more than an indirect participant, which is unfortunate even if accurate, given Korda's British identification and his lack of any Hungarian, not to mention how he was suspected by both sides by his sudden arrival. You will encounter instead about 90 pages of background on Hungarian topics, three chapters about what Korda and his companions witnessed within what we later know about the revolt, and a closing chapter quickly summarizing the aftermath.

Korda reminds us this was the first revolt where so many of the world's journalists were able to document it and send out their pictures. He also points out how later these same photos in the Western press would be scrutinized as the "traitors" were hunted down by the vengeful Soviets and their collaborators. This made me wonder how the papers were gathered by spies and fellow-travellers, and sent back somehow to military intelligence within the communist Kadar regime. Another story that needs telling?

I did like how photos were interspersed rather than gathered into the middle of the book. Stalin's statue pictured with only its boots remaining on the plinth, a Hungarian flag across the massive stumps, sums up well the whole revolution. Twice, for instance, we see the people described in the text: blonde fighter Kati, and the dashing Borsalino-wearing guerrilla with the wooden leg.

This book came out around the same time as Victor Sebestyén's "Twelve Days" historical narrative, and a new study of how Moscow, London, and Washington connived and fumbled in Charles Gati's "Failed Illusions." Korda has skimpy endnotes and barely any printed sources credited. These lengthier studies presumably will enrich what Korda intriguingly only alludes to: the debate over the true messages sent by Radio Free Europe, the British encouragement of the revolt to distract Russia from the Suez Canal, and the postwar role of Hungarian Communists who had fled to Moscow vs. those who had stayed behind under fascism. Korda implies that the superpowers manipulated the hopes of the freedom fighters and the repression of Moscow both, but more detail, even in such a short account, would have helped clarify these vexing issues.


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