[Redactor’s Note: The book is composed of text, footnotes, and appendices. The footnotes are included at the end of each chapter, while the Appendix No. and Section are referred to in the text in parentheses, the Appendices following the book text. There are 17 graphic figures in the text. These are indicated by a reference to the page number in the original book.]

Ten Days That Shook the World

by John Reed


Contents

[Preface]
[Notes and Explanations]
[Chapter 1. Background]
[Chapter 2. The Coming Storm]
[Chapter 3. On the Eve]
[Chapter 4. The Fall of the Provisional Government]
[Chapter 5. Plunging Ahead]
[Chapter 6. The Committee for Salvation]
[Chapter 7. The Revolutionary Front]
[Chapter 8. Counter-Revolution]
[Chapter 9. Victory]
[Chapter 10. Moscow]
[Chapter 11. The Conquest of Power]
[Chapter 12. The Peasants’ Congress]
[Appendices I - XII]

Preface

This book is a slice of intensified history—history as I saw it. It does not pretend to be anything but a detailed account of the November Revolution, when the Bolsheviki, at the head of the workers and soldiers, seized the state power of Russia and placed it in the hands of the Soviets.

Naturally most of it deals with “Red Petrograd,” the capital and heart of the insurrection. But the reader must realize that what took place in Petrograd was almost exactly duplicated, with greater or lesser intensity, at different intervals of time, all over Russia.

In this book, the first of several which I am writing, I must confine myself to a chronicle of those events which I myself observed and experienced, and those supported by reliable evidence; preceded by two chapters briefly outlining the background and causes of the November Revolution. I am aware that these two chapters make difficult reading, but they are essential to an understanding of what follows.