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Letters from Russia
Letters from Russia
Oct 7, 2024 12:17 AM

Author:Marquis de Custine

Letters from Russia

The Marquis de Custine's unique perspective on a vast, fascinating country in the grip of oppressive tyranny

In 1839, encouraged by his friend Balzac, Custine set out to explore Russia. His impressions turned into what is perhaps the greatest and most influential of all books about Russia under the Tsars.

Rich in anecdotes as much about the court of Tsar Nicholas as the streets of St Petersburg, Custine is as brilliant writing about the Kremlin as he is about the great northern landscapes. An immediate bestseller on publication, Custine's book is also a central book for any discussion of 19th century history, as - like de Tocqueville's Democracy in America - it dramatizes far broader questions about the nature of government and society.

Reviews

[Mortimer] has an instinctive sympathy for the men about whom he writes, a real understanding of the mentalities of late medieval England, and a vivid historical imagination which lends colour and excitement to his pages

—— Literary Review

Mortimer's book is a success and tells an important story very well

—— Richard Francis , Daily Telegraph

An arresting and original biography

—— Jessie Childs , Sunday Telegraph

[It] possesses the rare combination of clarity, liveliness, balanced judgement, erudition without pedantry, and scholarship founded on his own research among primary sources

—— Scotland on Sunday

The book is at its most compelling in conjuring a sense of place or occasion

—— Guardian

Comprehensive ... Darwin's erudition allows him to skirt around the narrow orthodoxies of apologist v critic and provide an insightful account of Britain's unlikely period of global hegemony

—— Sunday Times

Exhilarating ... Both in its modernist sense of "time in flux" and in its style, Red Fortress is at the furthest possible remove from Soviet schoolroom sermons about "the period of feudal atomization" and the rise of the centralizing state ... This is a book of detail and imagination ... a neohistorical account of the Russian past ... Red Fortress made me remember the open-mouthed delight I took when, hardly old enough to know where Russia was, I studied the émigré artist Boris Artsybashev's elegant, aetiolated portraits of medieval Russian princes

—— Catriona Kelly , Guardian

Red Fortress is a tour de force, as readable as it is extensively researched ... It never flags through nearly 10 centuries of Russian, Soviet and post-Soviet history ... [Merridale] is both mythbuster and pilgrim, captivated by her subject even while turning an eye of scholarly detachment to it

—— Virginia Rounding , Financial Times

One of the best popular histories of Russia in any language

—— Times Literary Supplement

Immensely readable ... Merridale recounts [the Kremlin's] eventful history with great skill and tremendous narrative verve

—— Ian Critchley , Sunday Times

Merridale is a historian by training, but she has a detective's nose and a novelist's way with words

—— Economist

As with many important books, the reader will wonder why nothing like Catherine Merridale's work ... has been written before ... Merridale has succeeded in stripping off the veneer... She has the skills to get guardians of secret places talking and to negotiate access with Russian archivists, and thus penetrate the inner workings of the Kremlin. At the same time, she has a feeling for the site that brings dry archaeological and architectural facts to life: few writers can write the biography of a city or a citadel ... The Kremlin's history is likely to be frozen for decades to come. This unique and stunningly well-illustrated book is going to be a definitive study for just as long

—— Donald Rayfield , Literary Review

Catherine Merridale's sparkling new book shows that it is people who dominate architecture

—— BBC History Magazine

As usual, [Merridale's] engaging writing style combines a keen eye for detail with a human touch

—— Times Higher Education

[A] superb history of the Kremlin ... pages of lucid prose

—— Irish Times

A thoughtful critique of privacy . . . blows apart our patronising attitude towards the Victorian family

—— Jane Ridley , Spectator 'Books of the Year'

Rigorous and relevant

—— TLS 'Books of the Year'

Pries open the most astounding archives to uncover what our recent ancestors tried to hide

—— Sunday Times 'Books of the Year'

Remarkable, moving and surprising . . . drawing on divorce courts, hospital records and adoption agencies, Cohen debunks many myths

—— Daily Mail

Groundbreaking reporting and character-rich storytelling... Passionately written...almost makes one nostalgic for a time when novels were so important that even the CIA cared about them

—— Ken Kalfus

A sparkling and fascinating account

—— David E. Hoffman

Well-paced narrative...of great relevance today, when such conflicts seem (but only seem) to have disappeared.

—— Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky

Immensely compelling

—— Fred Hiatt , The Pat Banker

Meticulously researched

—— Duncan White , Irish Independent

The true strength of this meticulously researched book is the placing of the revelations into the context of a compelling human drama

—— Weekly Telegraph

Engrossing

—— Andrew Lynch , Sunday Business Post

[An] outstanding treasure of literature

—— Market Oracle

Impeccably researched, and moving, this book breaks new ground

—— 5 stars , Sunday Telegraph
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