RETURN TO OLYMPUS
by
Book Details
About the Book
Very few books have been written about the 100 million or more human lives that have been lost around the planet since the inception of Communism-Marxism-Leninism (and its Gulags) in 1917. With the notable exceptions of Velikovsky’s “We” (1920’s), Orwell’s “1984” and Huxley’s “Brave New World” – all fiction – only a handful of Czech and Cuban works have expounded the eyewitness realities of the hell that is totalitarianism, among them Milan Kundera’s “The Unbearable Lightness of Being”; Vaculik’s “A Cup of Coffee with my Interrogator”, and Armando Valladares’ “Against All Hope.”Bohdan Wytwycky’s “The Other Holocaust” and Miron Dolot’s “Execution Through Hunger” also shed a much needed light on the barbaric and oft-forgotten, heinous crimes committed under Lenin, Stalin, (who could easily be accredited with 40 million or more deaths, just Russians and Ukrainians alone), Mao Ze Dong (50 million), Pol Pot (2 million), Fidel Castro (100,000 or more).Collectively, ten times more millions than Hitler’s several million gays, Gypsies, Jews and Baltic and Slavic peoples.Along with Romania, Cuba and Czecho slovakia were the most brutal and repressive societies (Cuba is still on the very top of the list), and this book vividly documents the cloak-and-dagger, conspiratorial nature of communism while at the same time detailing the length to which the “dissidence” and basic survival instinct will go to escape the firing squad or the country at any cost.Albert De Leon’s book takes us into the private life of two of his closest friends and the fear, the humiliation, the psychological torture and constant harassment to which they – and 25 million Czechs and Slovaks – suffered since 1948 – and 11 million Cubans are still subjected to.For both Alexei and Gregorio, the only option was to escape a well-planned escape.
About the Author
Albert De Leon was born in the old colonial city of
From altar-boy to boy-scout/pioneer through an adolescence filled with athletics and spartacades – a must in any and all communist countries – he was rubbing elbows with Czech, Slovak, Hungarian, Polish and Russian athletes, effectively getting caught up in the frenzy of coin, stamp and Olympic pin collecting that would define his private world years later.
During trips to
Having been lucky enough to escape Castro’s firing squads merely two weeks before the October missile crisis, he settled in Chicago, where he graduated from high school with many kids of Polish, Ukrainian, Czech, German, Russian and Italian descent, and was voted top student in his French class.
After graduation and a very short visit to
In
Albert currently lives in