this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2025
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See, this is why I have to be in the right headspace to enjoy all those "historical revolutionary/modern commie sent back in time/to a feudal era fantasy world, proceeds to spread modern communism" stories. They're just often unrealistic in pre industrial material conditions. That said, they're good fun if you don't want realism, just a vaguely Stalinist great-man revolution story. And the ones that aren't explicitly communist... much more believable, still a great revolution story. I definitely enjoy the John Brown Isekai because hey, he might be a proponent of American representative democracy, not the Soviet council system, which he would never have even known about, but a revolution is a revolution and freeing slaves is freeing slaves.
Which is why the only good communist novel I've read was about a Chinese Cadre getting spiritually isekaid and accelerating the historical development of a society in republican Rome times towards the feudal centralization power necessary to allow the natural flourishing of a bourgeois class and setting the groundwork for a modern society to be born after his death, way sooner than it naturally occured in the historical timeline.
Ooh, that sounds really good.
I just wish there was more explicitly communist fiction in general out there. Even the terribly unrealistic stuff. It's hard to find.
"Mediterranean Hegemon of Ancient Greece" by Chen Rui
There's occasionally something communistic that comes out of China's literature and comic entertainment section. Usually I when I catch a whiff of it in something I'm reading, the author tends to be knowledgeable of Marxism-Leninism and historical materialism and it shows in how they present their story. Sometimes it's overt, sometimes it's subtle.
Did any of us read Eminent Domain, Carl Neville? As I said I r noob so not clear if it passes muster theory wise, but I enjoyed it and creatively done + thought provoking
Never heard of that book. Might give it a read when I have time