As some of you might know I am the buyer for the largest bookstore in the country and a Russia/Eastern Europe watcher. Sitting on the convergence of these two interests of mine, I feel it would be a good idea to share a few books about the situation in 🇺🇦 🇷🇺
To make things a bit easy of course, all of the below should be available for purchase in the UK and bear in mind if you’re based outside UK, there might be different editions etc. Please take your business to your local bookstore or waterstones, don’t give money to big bad A!
Firstly, Ukraine. 🇺🇦
Probably the most commonly found book in British bookshops is ‘The Gates of Europe’ by @SPlokhy who is one of the most popular Ukraine scholars in the West, a professor at Harvard and director of Harvard Ukraine Inst. You’ll see his books come up again
Next up is ‘The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation’ by prof. Andrew Wilson of the @UCLSSEES . Great general history of the country. Bear in mind it’s from 2015 though so omits the most recent events.
Another bestseller here is ‘Borderland’ by Anna Reid who was the Kiev correspondent for The Economist 1993-1995. This is an updated version of the 1997 book. I’ve read it pre-update so cannot be sure of how up-to-date it is, but I loved it. Some shops even shelve this as travel
One of the best books I’ve read in the last few years is ‘Red Famine’ by the brilliant @anneapplebaum. It tells of Soviet-enforced collectivisation, famine and about the suppression of memory. Now more than ever, it shows how the present is shaped by the past. Will make you cry
Another infamous moment in history of 🇺🇦 was the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant accident and it remains the most popular reason for people requesting the 🇺🇦 history section. Below the 4 most read books with Plokhy and Chernobyl prayer winning awards but @HigginbothamA work my favourite.
Specifically on Maidan and E. Ukraine conflict 2014+.
I’ve really enjoyed the @timjudah1 book ‘In Wartime’. It’s a beautiful portrait of the human side of the conflict. Life behind frontlines and the barricades. Really helps understanding what normal Ukrainians are living with.
Russia 🇷🇺
Obviously if I was to list all the best books on Russian history, this thread would never end so only adding a few relevant to the current crisis
Starting with a general and short but no less impressive and fresh history of Russia by the one and only @MarkGaleotti
I’d say the most impressive and essential (also very recent) book on current Russia is ‘Putin’s People’ by @CatherineBelton. In it you will learn about how the siloviki empire was built and consolidated and it’s a must of a manual to the current Russian state. 11/10
Another recent masterpiece is ‘This is NOT Propaganda’ by @peterpomeranzev. Brill insight into how alternate reality is built by the Kremlin and run from troll farms. I loved his previous too which is a riveting insight into Russia a few decades ago, the Russia I remember myself
Another cracking read I enjoyed last year is ‘Between Two Fires’ by @yaffaesque which deservedly took an Orwell in 2021. Joshua is a Moscow writer for The New Yorker and his columns give me life. It’s an interesting look at the intimate lives and compromises of ordinary Russians
Today’s crisis almost overshadowed the fact that another trial of Alexei Navalny, Russia’s biggest oppositioner has begun, the trial after which he faces 15 more years behind bars. This is his first real bio and I loved having the authors of the book in store for an event!
Speaking about opposition. @HeidilBlake wrote one of the most unputdownable thrillers about all the sudden deaths of Kremlin’s enemies in the west. I loved this book. The author - is an investigations editor at BuzzFeedNews, no wonder this reads like true detective crime novel.
No list of books about Modern Russia is complete without @Billbrowder and his incredible true story ‘Red Notice’. Another one of those books that is hard to believe is not fiction but very much is the painful truth.
The Compatriots from @irinaborogan and @AndreiSoldatov is a wonderful collation of lives to all who worked for or fled Russia for abroad. I’ve also read their previous work The Red Web in original (Битва за рунет). I and A are very impressive journalists and their knowledge is 💯
If you’ve read ‘Putin’s People’ and want to learn more about the man’s inner circle look no further than ‘All the Kremlin’s Men’ by @zygaro, great introduction to a web of connections inside the court of Putin. More on oligarchs and their rise in ‘The Vory’ from @MarkGaleotti
Slightly older but no less fascinating entries here are from @edwardlucas . I’ve read ‘Deception’ and ‘The New Cold War’ all the way back and I must say some of this is pure prophecy.
Speaking of prophecy.
There is nothing more prophetic than the writing of Anna Politkovskaya . The reading of her books and articles formed my first opinions on Russia. She spoke Nothing but the Truth but paid the ultimate price…
From the more recent releases, @wiczipedia published the brilliant investigation into the nature of Russian disinformation campaigns in US during the Trump times but also in Ukraine and Georgia (the latter chapter fascinating) so if you enjoyed Peter Pomerantsev you’ll love this
Being Lithuanian I naturally want to learn more and more about how Russia’s thinking and behaviour will push the Baltic in the future. @Aliide_N released a brilliant study on this last year. Loved it 🇱🇹 🇱🇻 🇪🇪 ❤️
I make a habit of reading every single @lukeharding1968 release. The first, ‘Mafia State’ still in mind to this day. Very Expensive Poison also super duper good!
‘The Long Hangover’ by @shaunwalker7 is about the clever exploitation of memory and glories past by the current regime in it’s quest for popularity and public support. I loved the investigation and am hoping for more from the author - the style is unique!
And finally the foundational text for my understanding of modern Russia and Putinism is @TimothyDSnyder and his book ‘The Road To Unfreedom’. No space here for the synopsis, simply read the book. All I can say is that no westerner understands the region as well as TS.
Finally I’d include Putin v People from prof. @samagreene. I’ve enjoyed the in-depth and bottom-up study of Putin and his support base as much as I enjoyed attending prof. Greene’s lectures at @KingsRussia Institute.
There are 100s of books on this that I was unable to add to the thread (since when is there a cap on amount of tweets?) so please do not take omissions to heart. The goal was to introduce the very basics to peeps new to this.
Be nice to authors and ban the trolls.
Goodnight x
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2k24 is gonna be an incredible year for publishing. So much so this was going to be a thread for entire year. Can only fit the first 6 months in.
My interests: Russia, History, AI, Science. Little fiction here - sorry!
Let's go 👇
Usual caveats of: 1. 'this is my own list only and doesn't reflect my employer's selections' 2. 'did I miss smth obvious? please comment below' 3. 'I've probably got another 40 books but can't fit them all here'
and 4. 'nothing personal for any omissions'
apply
'Lenin Lives?' by Christopher Read
You thought you were done with Lenin? Well, Lenin is not done with you. An evaluation of man's life and specifically his legacy for the politics and the world of today.
Wind of Change and Conflict is blowing from the Middle East. But these winds are not new - in fact they blow for centuries now and at times like this week - they turn into hurricanes.
I don’t know my politics, but I do know my books. Here are some recommends:
1/21
Enemies and Neighbours by Ian Black. @ian_black
Drawing on a wide range of sources - from declassified documents to oral testimonies and his own decades of reporting - Enemies and Neighbours brings much-needed perspective and balance to the long and unresolved struggle between Arabs and Jews in the Holy Land.
Beginning in the final years of Ottoman ruleand the British Mandate period, when Zionist immigration transformed Palestine in the face of mounting Arab opposition, the book re-examines the origins of what was a doomed relationship from the start. It sheds fresh light on critical events such as the Arab rebellion of the 1930s; Israel's independence and the Palestinian catastrophe (Nakba in Arabic) of 1948; the watershed of the 1967 war; two Intifadas; the Oslo Accords and Israel's shift to the right. It traces how - after five decades of occupation, ever-expanding Jewish settlements and the construction of the West Bank 'separation wall' - hopes for a two-state solution have all but disappeared, and explores what the future might hold.
Yet Black also goes beyond the most newsworthy events - wars, violence and peace initiatives - to capture thereality of everyday life on the ground in Jerusalem and Hebron, Tel Aviv,Ramallah, Haifa and Gaza, for both sides of an unequal struggle. Lucid, timelyand gripping, Enemies and Neighbours illuminates a bitter conflict that shows no sign of ending - which is why it is so essential that we understand it.
From @PenguinUKBooks
2/21
The Making of the Modern Middle East by @BowenBBC
Based on Bowen's own extensive knowledge of the region from his role as International Editor of the BBC, The Making of the Modern Middle East is a revelatory account of power games between competing strongmen.
This is probably the most recent book on this list and thus will benefit from the freshest analysis.