Orlando Figes is the author of "A People's Tragedy", which won the NCR Book Award, the Wolfson History Prize, the Longman/History Today Book of the Year Award and the WH Smith Literary Award.
A history of Russia's mighty culture. It covers the lives of those who have shaped its culture, and the enduring spirit of a people.
Orlando Figes is the author of "A People's Tragedy", which won the NCR Book Award, the Wolfson History Prize, the Longman/History Today Book of the Year Award and the WH Smith Literary Award.
A history of Russia's mighty culture. It covers the lives of those who have shaped its culture, and the enduring spirit of a people.
A PEOPLE'S TRAGEDY won pretty much every prize for which it was eligibleThis tremendously attractive, ambitious, dizzying book is in every way a worthy successor to Figes' bestselling A PEOPLE'S TRAGEDY. The whole panorama of Russia's mighty culture is conjured up in a way that is fresh, intimate and immediate. Whether talking about music or novels, buildings or paintings, Figes' enthusiasm and literary brilliance sweeps the reader along through a series of great set-piece chapters.
Short-listed for Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction 2003 Short-listed for BBC Four Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction 2003
"Scintillating. . .an exceptional history of Russian culture and a joy to read." --"San Francisco Chronicle"
"Stunning and ambitious. . .Figes captures nothing less than Russians' complex and protean notions regarding their national identity." --"The Atlantic Monthly"
“Staggering. . .A vivid, entertaining, and enlightening account of what it has meant to be culturally a Russian over the last three centuries." --"Los Angeles Times"
"[A] masterly work." --"New York Review of Books"
"A big, bold, interpretative cultural history." --"Foreign Affairs"
Orlando Figes is Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London. His last book, A PEOPLE'S TRAGEDY (Cape 1996), won the NCR Book Award, the Wolfson History Prize, the Longman/History Today Book of the Year Award and the WH Smith Literary Award. He lives in Cambridge.
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