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010 _a27012792
040 _aUtSlPG
041 7 _aen
_2iso639-1
050 4 _aPS
100 1 _aRogers, Will,
_d1879-1935
245 1 0 _aThere's not a bathing suit in Russia & other bare facts
246 1 _aThere's not a bathing suit in Russia and other bare facts
264 1 _aSalt Lake City, UT :
_bProject Gutenberg,
_c2026
300 _a1 online resource :
_bmultiple file formats
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
500 _aRelease date is 2026-02-01
508 _aTim Lindell, Steve Mattern, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
520 _a"There's not a bathing suit in Russia & other bare facts" by Will Rogers is a humorous travelogue and social satire written in the late 1920s. The work chronicles a wisecracking journey through Europe into Soviet Russia, where Rogers riffs on politics, propaganda, aviation, and daily life while puncturing pretension on all sides. Expect folksy anecdotes, quick sketches of places and people, and sharp, self-deprecating observations rather than systematic analysis. The opening of this travelogue first mocks the endless, often ill-informed writing about Russia, skewers titled émigrés in Paris, and sets Rogers’s “novelty”: he openly admits he knows nothing and doubts anyone else does, given Russia’s size and mix of peoples. He then pivots to the trip itself—vodka-fueled banter with Morris Gest and Balieff in Paris, a visa hunt in London, and a comic, hopscotching flight across Europe full of gags about Channel swimmers, Dutch canals, and German efficiency. A surprise landing in Lithuania without a visa leads to a small payoff and onward rush to Russia, where aerial first impressions contrast women laboring in fields with men “cultivating whiskers,” and a discreet stop at Smolensk precedes an unexpectedly lax customs arrival in Moscow. Contrary to warnings, he roams unchaperoned, tours the Kremlin, fails to see Trotsky (learning Stalin is ascendant), meets American radicals, and begins his early appraisal: muddled socialist theory, postwar decay, high taxes, stabilized-but-scarce currency, and peasants withholding grain because prices and goods don’t add up. He then sketches Leningrad’s history and museums, the Winter Palace’s preserved rooms, the blood-soaked Revolutionary Museum, and a schooling and media system steeped in propaganda—even down to banning athletic competition—all setting the stage for the book’s broader satirical tour. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
534 _pOriginally published:
_cNew York: Albert & Charles Boni, 1927
653 _aRogers, Will, 1879-1935 -- Travel -- Russia (Federation)
653 _aRussia (Federation) -- Humor
653 _aRussia (Federation) -- Description and travel
700 1 _aRoth, Herb,
_d1887-1953
856 4 _uhttps://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015002743451
856 4 0 _uhttps://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77828
999 _c118548
_d118548