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Reds tells the global history of communism, but not one solely belonging to the previous century, but more as an idea, a movement and a regime. It starts in antiquity, not in 1917. It centres not just on the obvious leaders and thinkers but asks how the idealism of millions of working-class activists could lead to their acquiescence in mass murder, repression and social atomisation. A fact whose legacy – unfortunately – is alive and kicking in both Russia and China today.

 

Paul Mason’s startling new book will argue that the desire to live without hierarchy and property is an impulse deeply rooted in our human nature. Reds traces the history of the idea, through revolts in the ancient and medieval worlds, and chronicles the rise of 19th century anti-capitalist movements. Using first hand testimonies of both the perpetrators and the victims, Mason gives a new and terrifying account of how the 20th century experiment in communism turned into a totalitarian nightmare.

 

But, he argues, the story is not over. Western democracies are stagnant and lacking self-belief. Looming climate chaos demands radical economic answers. Millions of people in the global south see China’s offer of authoritarian, state-led development model as a viable alternative. And among the Western left, new forms of techno-egalitarianism vie with right-wing libertarianism in the battle over the digital future.

 

Reds will be a major analysis as we head into a dangerous new world order where China and Russia threaten major change to the world's democracies.

Reds: A Critical History of Communism

  • By Paul Mason

    Reds tells the global history of communism, but not one solely belonging to the previous century, but more as an idea, a movement and a regime.

  • Rights Sold

    United States and Canada, Greek, Portuguese, Dutch; Flemish, Italian, and Spanish

  • Book Details

    Imprint: Apollo l Publication Date: August 2026 l Hardback, 234 x 153mm | Extent: 608 pages

  • About the Author

    Paul Mason is the former economics editor of BBC Newsnight and Channel 4 News. He is a London-based freelance journalist and broadcast commentator, and writes regular columns in The New European, Frankfurter Rundschau and Social Europe. He is the author of seven books including Postcapitalism, How to Stop Fascism and Rare Earth: A Novel. His awards include RTS Specialist Broadcaster of the Year (2011) and the Erich Fromm Prize (2020).

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