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Black Earth: A Journey through Russia after the Fall by Andrew Meier
Black Earth: A Journey through Russia after the Fall Black Earth: A Journey through Russia after the Fall by Andrew Meier
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
List Price :$28.95
Amazon Price : $18.24
Used Price : $10.00
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Avg. Customer Rating:4.5 of 5.0

Reviews for Black Earth: A Journey through Russia after the Fall

From Publishers Weekly
"How do you explain a state in decay?" the author of this engrossing, beautifully written book asks about a country where "the death of an ideology has displaced millions," a third of the households are poor, and epidemics of HIV, TB, suicide, drug abuse and alcoholism are rife. Meier, a Moscow correspondent for Time magazine from 1996 to 2001, attempted to answer the question by traveling to the four corners of Russia so he could report on the suffering of the people as they struggle to survive in the ruins of the Soviet experiment. He began in 2000 by going south to war-devastated Chechnya, particularly the town of Aldy, a district of Grozny, which earlier that year had endured the massacre of at least 60 of its citizens by Russian soldiers. He then traveled north, above the Arctic Circle, to the heavily polluted industrial city of Norilsk, originally a labor camp and now "a showcase for the ravages of unbridled capitalism," where descendants of the prisoners still mine for precious metals. Finally, he went west to St. Petersburg, "a den of thieves and compromised politicians" whose much-heralded revival is largely unrealized and where the people are still haunted by the assassination in 1998 of Galina Vasilievna Starovoitova, the country's leading liberal. After talking to scores of people-from survivors of the Aldy massacre to a harrowed Russian lieutenant colonel who runs the body-collection point closest to the Chechen battleground-Meier paints in this heartbreaking book a devastating picture of contemporary life in a country where, as one man put it, people have "lived like the lowest dogs for more than eighty years." Maps and photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Meier reported on Russia in the late 1990s for the newsweekly Time and ventured to the geographical limits of the gigantic country. His destinations frame the reflective reportage he offers here. His narrative contains a considerable amount of literary allusion, and in the case of Chekhov, he overtly retraces that writer's famed trip to the island of Sakhalin. What Meier encounters there, as well as in his voyage down the Yenisei River to the forbidding Arctic city of Norilsk ("a Pompeii of Stalinism"), is the legacy of the gulag. Meier spares no detail of the country's physical dilapidation and also probes the attitudes of Russians toward the tough conditions of their lives. Nostalgia for the communist system remains prominent, even among some victimized by it, a recurring paradox among the author's many insights about contemporary Russia. These emerge, too, in his chronicle of Chechnya (where he investigated a massacre) and in his accounts of mobsters and liberals in St. Petersburg. In Meier, Russophiles have a kindred spirit who mirrors their own fascination with the vast and troubled country. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Time, 27 October 2003
A poignant and powerful portrait of a shattered nation.


Zbigniew Brzezinski
If President Bush were to read only the chapters regarding Chechnya, he would gain a priceless education about Putin's Russia. --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopold's Ghost and The Unquiet Ghost: Russians Remember Stalin
Readers could not easily find a livelier or more insightful guide. --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

Michael Specter, staff writer, The New Yorker; co-chief, the New York Times Moscow Bureau, 1995-98
It's all here in great detail, written in the layers the story deserves, with insight, passion, and genuine affection. --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

The Economist
[Meier's] knowledge of the country and his abiding love for its people stands out on every page of this book. --This text refers to the
Paperback edition.

Book Description
With the power of Lenin's Tomb and Balkan Ghosts, an illuminating portrait of contemporary Russia.

A decade after the Soviet collapse, Russia remains a country in limbo, a land of vast potential struggling with an unfinished past. Journeying to Russia's five corners—Moscow, Chechnya, Norilsk, Sakhalin, and St. Petersburg—Andrew Meier presents a history of contemporary Russia. In Moscow and St. Petersburg, Meier explores Russia's unbridled market and often lethal politics. From Chechnya, where he investigates the worst single-day massacre of civilians, to Norilsk, the world's northernmost city, Meier uncovers a common theme: the need to find meaning amid the Soviet ruins. In the tradition of Rebecca West's Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, Black Earth is a penetrating view of the new Russia from a bold new voice in political journalism. 7 maps.

Book Info
Text provides a history of modern Russia a decade after the Soviet fall. Illustrated. DLC: Russia (Federation)--Description and travel.


About the Author
Andrew Meier, a Moscow correspondent for Time magazine from 1996-2001, and a recent fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC, is a contributor to Time Europe.


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