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STALIN’S DEATH

Memoirs By Daughter

(N.Z.PA.-lteuter—CoppripM) LONDON, August 6. Josef Stalin’s daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva, tells of the agonising* death of her father but dismisses any idea of a “doctors* plot” against him in a Russian-language version of her memoirs published in London last week. Mrs Alliluyeva, who fled to the West last April, describes the lingering death her father suffered from asphyxiation after suffering a brain stroke in 1953.

In her simply-written book, "Twenty Letters To A Friend,” she tells In human terms of Stalin and the life behind the walls of the Kremlin.

The book, to be published throughout the world in October, was published in London in a Russian version to establish copyright

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19670807.2.174

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CVII, Issue 31441, 7 August 1967, Page 15

Word Count
115

STALIN’S DEATH Press, Volume CVII, Issue 31441, 7 August 1967, Page 15

STALIN’S DEATH Press, Volume CVII, Issue 31441, 7 August 1967, Page 15

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