Gorbachev Makes Book, Sort Of

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Russia's economic free fall has not been kind to Mikhail Gorbachev. First, in the banking collapse that followed last August's devaluation of the ruble, he lost--as he told the German magazine Bunte--his life savings of some $80,000. Then the Pizza Hut in Moscow that he made world famous in a TV commercial last year closed its doors. Now he's trying to make a little scratch and regain a measure of respect at home--where the vast majority of his compatriots continue to revile him for causing their present woes--with the latest volume in his post-Politburo oeuvre. Titled "Thoughts on the Past and the Future," the 300-page "textbook" consists of the former General Secretary's deep thoughts on his country and the 20th century as the millennium approaches. Although Columbia University Press is to publish an English-language edition in 1999, Gorby has little hope for redemption at home. The Russian-language run of "Thoughts" is embarrassingly small: just 10,000 copies have been printed. And although the book costs only about $1, fewer than 100 of his die-hard groupies turned up last week at a gala press conference to grab the first copies.