The Russians
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Format: Mass Market Paperback
ISBN: 0345317467
ISBN-13: 9780345317469
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Release Date: August, 1984
Length: 527 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 6.8 X 4.2 X 1.4 inches
Language: English
   
   

The Russians

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Hedrick Smith has done what we all wish we could do: he has gone to Russia and spoken to the people. Over steaming samovars, in cramped flats, and on dirt-floors, he has spoken to peasants and bureaucrats, artists and officials. He has studied their customs and their governments and shares his fascinating insights and fresh perspectives with us.
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Customer Reviews

  An Undisputed Classic

It's really difficult to find a better book as an introduction to contemporary history. Now that the Berlin Wall has fallen, it's difficult for current generations of American university students to understand what Communism was like. Even current generations of Russian immigrants have difficulty remembering Communism. This book is a link to that history that couldn't be any more brilliant. That is why Mr. Hedrick's books continues to be one of the most commonly assigned books in Russian history and politics classes. The sequel "The New Russians" is updated to reflect the fall of Communism and the current morass (2000) that Russia is in now. Anykind of popular story or joke that I heard then was captured in this book. The best thing about the book is that Mr. Headrick wrote in a way that could be understood by the average American (meaning even my students could understand this book!). If you don't have much of a feel for what life was like in Russia when it was the USSR, then the "Russians" is your ticket to both understanding and getting a feel for life under Communism.
 
  Getting to know Russia from the inside

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union a decade ago, I have visited various parts of the former Soviet Union over a dozen times. What astonishes me about this book is that all that Smith reports so closely matches what I have seen and experienced on my visits to the Soviet empire. Though he wrote in the 1970s - long before the collapse of Communism - Smith has captured the essence of the country and its people in a way which is extremely readable and relevant today. It is the best book on Russia which I have read.
 
  Russia before Gorbachev, remember?

For anyone interested in how any of it's citizens can possibly feel nostalgia for the former Soviet Union, or why so many others chose a political path towards democracy, this book is indispensable. Much of what is occurring now in Russian politics and culture can be traced back to conditions presented here. This is a magnificent portrait of a country which didn't allow portraits. Those willing to overlook a few Cold War cliches have to agree that this book is a classic.
 
  An excellent and required read

I cannot claim to be a student of Russian history, but I have always foudn the ironies and disconnects of Russian life interesting. I just read this book in 2004, and now understand today's headlines from Russia, and their nostalgia for the order of the brutal regimes that preceded the fall of the Soviet Union. This is, as someone else said, a classic, a must read, a requirement for anyone who needs to understand Russia. Don't worry about it being date; part of Russian culture is that they cling hopelessly to the old while being swept cruelly away by the new. The attitudes and longings portrayed in this book appear to still be the same.
 
  An astounding insight of the Russian people during Brezhnov

Hedrick Smith is a modern day Herodotus (sans the tall tale reputation). This is an honest and fascinating look at the reality of the Russian people and what it was really like to live under 'Communism'. By having a first-hand view of the Russian people and the system, Americans can not only recognize how fortunate we are to live in a 'democracy'; but also how alike we are in our human-ness. I am looking forward to 'The New Russians' by Mr. Smith.