Cars for Comrades is a complex, sophisticated, and entertaining history of cars and trucks in the Soviet Union.(Business History Review) A groundbreaking chronicle of the contradictory, faltering, and fascinating march toward automobilism in the USSR.- Tom Vanderbilt (Times Literary Supplement) Lewis H. Siegelbaum explores the curious antinomy between the car and Communism. On the one hand, the production of cars was a symbol of Communism. The building of car-producing factories was an important criterion for catching up with and surpassing America. On the other hand, almost nobody had a car in their personal possession in the early Soviet years. The production itself was important, not the result, which is not surprising if we take into account that a car was a symbol of personal independence.(Slavic and East European Journal) Siegelbaum has produced a superb account of Soviet life as viewed through the lens of the failed Soviet struggle to match the capitalist West, and the United States in particular, auto for auto and highway for highway, while denying its citizens the mobility that would undermine the Soviet state.... The book is a pleasure to read and... brings an important part of the history of the Soviet Union to light by illustrating the day-to-day workings of its economic system.- Andrew Morriss (Books & Culture) Siegelbaum's book is impressive. It deserves to be heralded by a whole Moscow traffic-jam full of tooting horns.(American Historical Review) This is a statistic-rich volume, but, as Siegelbaum acknowledges, the Soviet statistic is slippery and sometimes misleading. Statistics may be plentiful, but facts are somewhat patchy, and the strength of Siegelbaum's approach lies in his skillful interweaving of numerical evidence and exegesis, bolstering massaged official figures and incomplete data with textual and visual sources: memoirs, anecdotes, transcripts, reports, publications, paintings, films, photographs, and a variety of other archival materials. This inclusive approach carries the reader on raised suspension over the worst potholes and inconsistencies in the road surface.- Oliver Johnson (Journal of Cold War Studies)