Mike Pursley:
"These fine essays show that a clash of civilizations can play out in the everyday commodities such as cars. Automobility as it manifested under Socialism proves to be an incredibly rich subject, reaching from the design of vast metropolitan areas down to ways the average car owner cared for their vehicle. Luminita Gatejel's essay on Socialist car culture describes the 'ambiguous amalgam of Socialist superiority and the painful awareness of backwardness' that the car caused the Eastern Bloc and USSR to feel."
Zachary Doleshal:
"[These] essays are of a high standard and together provide us with an excellent resource for car cultures under twentieth-century socialist regimes.... [They] would make an excellent addition to any reading list concerned with modern Eastern Europe, material culture, and automobility."
Natalya Chernyshova:
"Lewis H. Siegelbaum is well placed to lead the exploration of socialist automobility.. As a result, this collection of essays edited by Siegelbaum offers many insights on lived socialism in Eastern Europe and the USSR, especially in the post-Stalin era. The essays are diverse in their approachs and sources, which range from popular culture, cinema, and archival records to oral history.. The book, which is engaging and full of telling anectodes about lived socialism, is a valuable contribution not only to the historiography of the region but also to studies of automobility cultures worldwide."
Kimberly Elman Zarecor:
"In this exemplary volume, the seemingly narrow topic of automobility in the Eastern Bloc becomes a window into aspects of history as varied as factory production, Communist Party politics, urban planning, and the domestic lives of women.... The everyday experiences of European socialism really come alive in these pages as the singular attention to the car allows the era's larger social, economic, and political issues to be highlighted and interrogated in multiple, convincing ways."
Tim Harte:
"Cars offer a fascinating prism through which to explore the socialist society that materialized in the Eastern Bloc after 1917.... The sociological and cultural approaches one might take in regard to the automobile are numerous and diverse and The Socialist Car does not disappoint."
Thomas M. Bohn, Giessen Justus-Liebig University, author of Minsk:
"Mass-scale house building and motorization transformed the face of Eastern Europe after World War II. With his consideration of the consumer revolution, Lewis H. Siegelbaum has brought to light a hidden side of Communism, beyond the Stalinist terror."
Susan E. Reid, University of Sheffield, coeditor of Pleasures in Socialism: Leisure and Luxury in the Eastern Bloc:
"In this rich and varied collection the nature of the socialist car, socialist car culture, and automobility are explored from a range of disciplinary perspectives. Covering topics from tinkering to trucking, it brings fresh insights to the nature of Eastern Bloc consumption and society."
Bernhard Rieger, University College London, author of Technology and the Culture of Modernity in Britain and Germany, 1890–1945 :
"With its careful analyses of how official ideologies, production regimes, and private desires shaped Socialist car cultures, this book opensup fascinating perspectives on the history of the automobile. Broadly and imaginatively conceived, The Socialist Car addresses concerns that lie at the heart of twentieth-century consumer society across the globe."
Stephen Lovell, King's College London, author of Summerfolk:
"Automobility is by definition no observer of national boundaries, and you simply cannot make sense of it without international and transnational contexts. It is clear, as Lewis H. Siegelbaum notes, that the socialist bloc gave rise to an 'alternative modernity,' a specifically socialist take on consumerism and individual mobility. That is not to say, however, that a Soviet model was blithely adopted in Czechoslovakia or Poland. Far from it: this book shows how we need to remain attentive to national cultures and economies when we tell the story of the adoption of personal car use and ownership."
Sally West:
"As is clear from the eleven chapters covering more than six countries, there was no single consensus on how to reconcile consumers' desires for individual mobility with the ideological demands of collectivity... Together, the essays in this volume both explain and complicate commonly held notions about the deficiencies of consumer goods in the Eastern Bloc. The Socialist Car fills a noticeable gap in comparative studies of consumer culture as well as automobility, and will be of interest to scholars well beyond historians of Eastern Europe."