Russia (A Journey to the Heart of a Land and its People) is a report about a journey through Russia, by a distinguished broadcaster and author Jonathan Dimbleby.
The journey starts in Murmansk, in the Article Circle and ends in Vladivostock, in the Far East Asia, 10,000 miles and eight times ... Read review
Russiais a massive book: sprawling, ambitious and richly detailed. Jonathan Dimbleby's ... more
subtitle isA Journey to the Heart of a Land and its People, and fears that he might have bitten off more than he can chew (both in this book and its accompanying TV...
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In summer 2006 Jonathan Dimbleby sets out on the first leg of something of an epic two ... more
year journey. He will travel across Russia from the far West to the Far East visiting great cities struggling over mountain passes gliding up the Volga riding th...
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Winston Churchill famously described Russia as 'a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an ... more
enigma'. Even today it remains a country little understood by the West. But as a resurgent world power, with an energy-rich economy, we ignore Russia at our peril.
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Russia is a massive book: sprawling, ambitious and richly detailed. Jonathan Dimbleby's ... more
subtitle is A Journey to the Heart of a Land and its People, and fears that he might have bitten off more than he can chew (both in this book and its accompanying ...
Postage & Packaging: refer to website Availability: Free!
In television's first comprehensive journey through the vast and varied landscapes of ... more
Russia the resourceful Jonathan Dimbleby makes an epic journey from one end to the other killing cliches and revelling in the unpredictable. Across nine time zones and through all extremes of weather he seeks out the people of this strange and extraordinary land. From the Arctic Circle where the summer sun never sets to the subzero wastes of Siberia from white witches to hirsute masseurs from oil wells to shamans Dimbleby's journey by boat train truck and foot is heart-warming entertaining and compelling. From outside Russia is both forbidding and enticing. Inside it becomes an exhilarating adventure.
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Across seven time zones and through all extremes of weather, the writer and TV presenter ... more
Jonathan Dimbleby makes an epic journey through vast and varied landscapes of Russia, killing cliches and revelling in the unpredictable.This landmark BBC series opens with Dimbleby driving over the tundra inside the Arctic Circle. It is the short summer season - when the snow melts and the sun never sets. Ahead of him lies 10,000 miles of hard travelling, through a country that is not only the largest in the world but also, perhaps, the most awe-inspiring.Look through one window, and you see an authoritarian regime trying to modernise itself into an oil-rich economy. Look through another, and you see exuberant people enjoying new opportunities but struggling with old problems, the marker stones of their turbulent past painfully evident.Dimbleby's exhilarating journey by boat, train, truck and foot is heart-warming, entertaining and compelling viewing.
Advantages: informative, well reported historical facts and interesting encounters with locals Disadvantages: too much personal life of the journalist in the book (not inherent to the context)
Russia (A Journey to the Heart of a Land and its People) is a report about a journey through Russia, by a distinguished broadcaster and author Jonathan Dimbleby.
The journey starts in Murmansk, in the Article Circle and ends in Vladivostock, in the Far East Asia, 10,000 miles and eight times zone away. Dimbleby travels by road, plane, boat and train covering the major cities of Russia such as Saint Petersburg, Moscow, Ekaterinburg, ... ...and it couldn’t be otherwise. Russia is basically a dictatorship with a puppet government, but what infuriates Dimbleby is that to many Russians (young people included) this is not a problem. They like a strong man and they certainly have one in Putin.
The highlights of the long trip in my opinion are the visit to the Dagestan region, not far from Chechnya and Georgia, where war has always been on the menu, and the visit to Siberia. ... more
Russia (A Journey to the Heart of a Land and its People) is a report about a journey through Russia, by a distinguished broadcaster and author Jonathan Dimbleby.
The journey starts in Murmansk, in the Article Circle and ends in Vladivostock, in the Far East Asia, 10,000 miles and eight times zone away. Dimbleby travels by road, plane, boat and train covering the major cities of Russia such as Saint Petersburg, Moscow, Ekaterinburg, as well as less known cities and realities in the country.
During the trip, there are many encounters with Russian people of all class and creed and this is, in my opinion, the backbone of the book. It is by talking with the local people that Dimbleby and the reader can understand about Russia, a country that is still, as Churchill once famously put it, “A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma”.
The book is filled with essential historical facts, from the origin of the Russian state to present “Putin Russia”, via the Tzar’s dynasty and the Communist Revolution.
I give full credit to Dimbleby in exposing the atrocities perpetrated by the Communists during their dictatorship, without skipping quickly over the subject, or blaming only Stalin for that. Dimbleby makes quite clear that the atrocities were perpetrated by an ideology, not just by a crazy man. I was a bit surprised and relieved by this, given the well known Left-winger bias of the BBC, the producer of the book.
Dimbleby is also very critical of Vladimir Putin and it couldn’t be otherwise. Russia is basically a dictatorship with a puppet government, but what infuriates Dimbleby is that to many Russians (young people included) this is not a problem. They like a strong man and they certainly have one in Putin.
The highlights of the long trip in my opinion are the visit to the Dagestan region, not far from Chechnya and Georgia, where war has always been on the menu, and the visit to Siberia. Majority of the books about Russia talk about the European side, but it is in the Asian side that most of the wealth (oil and precious materials) comes from.
Dimbleby is a fan of Tolstoy and of Russian literature as a whole. He often cites extracts from Russian novels to explain how the stories are still relevant today and to understand the Russian way of thinking and living.
The book is enjoyable and I recommend it to anyone who wishes to learn about Russian culture and its people. With 542 pages this book can at times seem a very long one, but there are a variety of topics to keep the reader entertained and Dimbleby’s writing is rather accessible.
I have only two criticisms about the book, one of which is the poor knowledge by Dimbleby of Russian language. From the only British journalist to have had an interview with Gorbachev during the Cold War, I was expecting him to have at least some grasp of the language. I am surprised he didn’t enrol in a crash course of Russian before the trip.
The second aspect is that Dimbleby talks rather too much about his personal life, especially in the first chapters of the book. I have bought the book in order to learn about Russia, not also to learn about the personal life of the journalist! I think his private life should have been left completely out of it, for his benefit as well as the reader.
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Product details
EAN
9780563539124
Type
Non-Fiction
Genre
Travel
Subgenre
Travel writing
Title
Russia
Author
Jonathan Dimbleby
Publisher
BBC Books
All Authors
Jonathan Dimbleby
Country
Russia
Continent
Europe
ISBN
563539127
Manufacturer's product description
Winston Churchill famously described Russia as 'a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma'. Even today it remains a country little understood by the West.
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