released 10/16/2006

In 1989, David Aikman, then a journalist with Time magazine, was granted the first major interview Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn had given an American news organization for years. In this essay, Aikman offers an engaging and lively account of the dramatic and sobering events of Solzhenitsyn’s life: from his early years as a Communist, to the beginnings of his literary efforts and his subsequent imprisonment, to his exile and life in the West, to his return to Russia in the 1990s. A portrait emerges of a courageous man devoted to the battle for truth in the context of the distinctive disorders of modern, post-Christian culture.

This Reprint is read by the author, and includes a foreword written and read by Os Guinness on the contemporary crisis of truth in the West. It was originally published by the Trinity Forum in 1997.

This product is only available to those listeners who purchased it prior to 2024.

107 minutes