Ten Days That Shook the World
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A suffocating fog clings to the cobbled streets of Petrograd, mirroring the miasma of discontent that rises from the city’s heart. Reed doesn’t chronicle revolution as spectacle, but as a slow, agonizing birth from the womb of winter. Each day bleeds into the next, marked not by triumphs but by the chilling weight of expectation—a waiting for the inevitable crack of ice underfoot. The narrative is less a procession of events and more a descent into the shadowed alleys where whispers of Bolshevik fervor mingle with the stench of starvation. A perpetual twilight smothers the narrative, blurring the lines between hope and desperation. The descriptions are haunted by the phantom limbs of Tsarist grandeur, decaying amidst the grit and gunpowder. You feel the cold seep into your bones alongside the soldiers, taste the iron tang of the barricades. It's a world where every broken window, every shouted slogan, echoes with the hollow resonance of a world collapsing inward, swallowed by a darkness that isn't merely political, but something ancient and feral rising from the frozen earth. The weight of history isn’t just told, it’s *breathed* into the lungs with each ragged inhale of the Petrograd air.
Copyright: Public Domain
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Chapter List

110

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