Based on unprecedented research in Yiddish-language Jewish and overlooked Soviet archives, Without a Trace… recounts the tragic odyssey of Noah London, a leader of the Stalinist industrial revolution in the Donbass who became a secret dissident due to the Ukrainian famine.
John D. Holmes gives a vital insight into the nature of and origins of Stalinism and the causes of the “Great Terror,” the most mysterious episode of Soviet history. Through the lives of Noah and Miril London, Holmes tells the inside story of US and Soviet Communism, their similarities and parallels, and the Soviet bureaucracy in the Stalin era. The book shows how the revolution in Russia, twentieth-century Jewish history, US and Russian labor history and the evolution of Stalinism are intertwined threads. They link historical moments on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean and around the world. The London story has much to say about the present-day world and prospects for the future, not least by shedding light on today’s war-torn Donbass.
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“John Holmes has devoted himself to uncovering the meaning of London’s life which meant careful examination of the different factions within Bund socialism, exploring the ins and outs of labor politics in New York in early decades of the 20th. Century, then studying, with the help of new archival materials, the politics of water in the Ukraine under a system of economic planning and party autocracy, and then following (again with the help of the archives) the tortuous political swings of the Stalinist regime in the 1930s, leading up to the purges. So what does Holmes come up with—apart from a magnificent narrative? I was struck by his explanation of the purges. His detailed analysis suggests the convergence of two processes. On the one hand there was the now familiar politics of upward mobility within the Stalinist party state, but, on the other hand, there was the break neck speed of economic development that inevitably led to planning failures. These might look as though they are the result of deliberate wrecking, but in fact they were the response of enterprise managers bent on an impossible mission. There is no need to look for any conspiracy to explain the purges. More generally, through the biography of Noah London, Holmes has produced a biography of socialism in the twentieth century, from its pre-Soviet beginnings, to the Russian Revolution, to the export of communism, and then to the way the revolution turned in on itself from which it never really recovered.”
– Michael B. Burawoy
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“John Holmes' book is a feat of historical recovery, restoring Noah London to his place in the history of the American left and, notably, Stalinist Russia.”
– David Brody
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“A long-awaited text from the era of the Yiddish Left, this valuable book will be read with interest and pleasure by scholars of the Russian Revolution, the immigrant Left in the US at large, and the Yiddish contingent in US culture and politics."
– Paul Buhle -
“This book, representing years of research in archives in the United States and the former Soviet Union in multiple languages, tells a fascinating story that is crucial for scholars of the left and labor movement in the United States, the Soviet Union, and of transnational Jewish radicalism. Holmes' telling of the Londons' story has more drama than many novels.”
– Jacob A. Zumoff, New Jersey City University