To live now and not to know this work is to be a kind of historical fool missing a crucial part of the consciousness of the age
Guardian
The ferocious testimony of a man of genius
London Magazine
What gives the book its value is the sound it gives out; the harsh roar give out by a wise and experienced animal as a warning that the herd is in danger
Sunday Telegraph
He is one of the towering figures of the age as a writer, as moralist, as hero... in <i>The Gulag Archipelago</i> he has acheived the impossible
Observer
It is impossible to name a book that had a greater effect on the political and moral consciousness of the late twentieth century
New Yorker
The Gulag Archipelago is Solzhenitsyn's masterwork, a vast canvas of camps, prisons, transit centres and secret police, of informers and spies and interrogators and also of heroism, a Stalinist anti-world at the heart of the Soviet Union where the key to survival lay not in hope but in despair.
The work is based on the testimony of some two hundred survivors, and on the recollection of Solzhenitsyn's own eleven years in labour camps and exile. It is both a thoroughly researched document and a feat of literary and imaginative power. This edition has been abridged into one volume at the author's wish and with his full co-operation.