TY - BOOK AU - McWilliams, Wilson Carey. TI - The Glasnost reader SN - 452263212 AV - FIC .G53 1990 PY - 1990/// CY - New York PB - A Plume Book, New American Library KW - POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT N1 - Advertising -- Afghanistan -- Agriculture -- Aids -- Alcoholism -- Alienation -- N. Andreyeva -- Anti-Semitism -- Armenia -- L.beria -- Black market -- L. Brezhnev -- J. brodsky -- Bukharin -- Bureaucracy -- Censorship -- Cold war -- Consumer affairs -- Cooperatives -- Credit card -- Crime -- Culture -- Demilitarization -- Decision-making -- Democracy -- Democratic union -- Dogs -- Economy -- Elections -- Environment -- Estonia -- Evil eyes -- Freud -- Foreign aid -- Funerals -- Glasnost -- Gorbachev -- History -- Homelessness -- Housing -- Human rights -- Ideology -- Fazil Iskander -- N.S. Khrushchev -- Kulaks -- Law -- V. Lenin -- Lithuania -- Maps -- R. Medvedev -- "Memorial" -- Military -- Nomenklatura -- Boris Pasternak -- perestroika -- Police -- The press -- Prostitution -- Rehabilitation -- Remorse -- Revenge -- Revolution -- M. Rostropovich -- A. Rybakov -- A. Sakharov -- Samizdat -- Satire -- Shortages -- A. Solzhenitsyn -- Spies -- Stalinism -- Strikes -- Telephones -- Travel -- Trust -- Unemployment -- United States -- Women -- World War -- B. Yeltsin -- S. Zalygin N2 - Gathering speeches, articles and interviews, this hefty omnibus exhaustively details myriad aspects of Soviet government and society. Khrushchev's 20th party congress denouncement of Stalin, only recently made public, is a notable entry, as are articles from the Soviet press that seriously critique Stalinism and Pamyat--a contemporary, conservative, anti-Semitic nationalist group--or scrutinize glasnost, perestroika, shortages and limited capitalism. Perhaps the most absorbing selections focus on smaller issues, such as the difficulties of purchasing quality TV sets or fashionable clothing. Letters to the editors of leading Soviet publications are rich with humorous vignettes that poke fun at the hardships of Soviet life; the letters' mere existence is a testament to glasnost. The diversity of material is welcome and generally will attract a wide readership, although weak footnoting and introductions render some pieces obscure. Poor translations also mar the text. But the book is worth its considerable weight if only for the inclusion of the transcripts of poet Joseph Brodsky's 1960s trials for "parasitism." ER -