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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- In November 1969 Strobe Talbott, then working on his thesis
- at Oxford, was summoned by TIME's Moscow bureau chief, Jerrold
- Schecter, for whom Talbott had worked as an intern the previous
- summer, and handed a pile of Russian typescript to translate.
- "After reading several pages," says Talbott, now editor at
- large, "I knew that I had in my hands one of the most
- fascinating and unusual documents ever to emerge from the
- Soviet Union." The papers, published in 1970 as the book
- Khrushchev Remembers, were transcripts of tapes recorded by
- Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in forced retirement.
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- But when he donned headphones to listen to Khrushchev's
- sometimes animated, sometimes weary voice, Talbott discovered
- there were gaps on the tapes. That was also true of a second
- set of tapes and transcripts, published in 1974 as Khrushchev
- Remembers: The Last Testament. In that Watergate summer,
- Talbott and Schecter joked that the same "sinister forces" that
- Alexander Haig blamed for erasing material from President
- Nixon's tapes had been at work on Khrushchev's recordings.
- Actually, it was obvious from the context -- and noted in the
- books -- what had happened: friends and relatives who had
- worked with Khrushchev on his memoirs had deleted remarks about
- Soviet and foreign leaders or revelations about Soviet history
- that may have been dangerously indiscreet.
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- Would that material ever surface? Astonishingly, the answer
- is yes. Last year TIME received nearly 100 additional hours of
- Khrushchev tapes with enough material to make a third book,
- excerpted in this issue and to be published, like the previous
- two, by Little, Brown, a part of Time Warner Inc. This time
- Schecter, now an author and a founding editor of a new joint
- U.S.-weekly newspaper, did the translating and editing, in
- collaboration with Vyacheslav Luchkov, a scholar and expert on
- Soviet psychology. The title, Khrushchev Remembers: The
- Glasnost Tapes, underscores the connection between Khrushchev
- and Mikhail Gorbachev. Says Talbott: "As though anticipating
- what Gorbachev tried to do, Khrushchev even uses the word
- perestroika in his own appeal for sweeping reconstruction of
- the Soviet political and economic system."
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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