On August 20, 1940, Marxist philosopher, politician, and revolutionary
Leon Trotsky was attacked with an ice axe in his home in Coyoacán,
Mexico. He died the next day.
In The Great Prince Died, Bernard Wolfe offers his lyrical,
fictionalized account of Trotsky's assassination as witnessed through
the eyes of an array of characters: the young American student helping
to translate the exiled Trotsky's work (and to guard him), the Mexican
police chief, a Rumanian revolutionary, the assassin and his handlers, a
poor Mexican "peón," and Trotsky himself. Drawing on his own experiences
working as the exiled Trotsky's secretary and bodyguard and mixing in
digressions on Mexican culture, Stalinist tactics, and Bolshevik
history, Wolfe interweaves fantasy and fact, delusion and journalistic
reporting to create one of the great political novels of the past
century.