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The 900 Days, The Siege of Leningrad  •  Harrison Salisbury
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 640 PAGES
Salisbury's detailed account of the Nazi blockade of Leningrad (now St Petersburg). During the siege, the only open route to the city lay across Lake Ladoga, where supplies could be driven on an ice road to the starving city in the winter. Lake Ladoga is included on river voyages between Moscow and St. Petersburg. (RUS235, $27.00)
  The 900 Days, The Siege of Leningrad
Alexander Pushkin, The Collected Stories  •  Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin
LITERATURE •  1999 •  HARD COVER  • 548 PAGES
An expanded collection of Pushkin's tales, including The Captain's Daughter, The Queen of Spades, Tales of Belkin, and many shorter works. With a long introduction by John Bayley and chronology. Translated and presented by Paul Debreczeny. (RUS196, $25.00)
  Alexander Pushkin, The Collected Stories
The Amber Room, The Fate of the World's Greatest Lost Treasure  •  Adrian Levy  •  Catherine Scott-Clark
HISTORY •  2005 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES • COMING IN
Two investigative journalists on the trail of a roomful of amber from the days of Peter the Great, missing since the Siege of Leningrad in 1941. Scott-Clark and Levy have also written a book on the search for prized Burmese jade (The Stone of Heaven). (RUS244, $16.00)
 
Among the Russians  •  Colin Thubron
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
The marvelous account of a 10,000-mile journey by car from St. Petersburg and the Baltic States south to Georgia and Armenia in 1981. A gifted writer and intrepid traveler, Thubron grapples with the complex Russian identity in this lyrical book, first published as "Where Nights are Longest." Thubron combines his encounters with the interesting characters he meets with Russian history, politics and insightful commentary. Highly recommended. (RUS106, $14.00)
  Among the Russians
Anna Karenina  •  Leo Tolstoy  •  Larissa Volokhonsky  •  Richa Pevear
LITERATURE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 838 PAGES
Tolstoy's tragic love story of the beautiful, but married Anna, and her passionate affair with the dashing Count Vronsky. An adulterous relationship in late 19th Century Russia is not without its harsh consequences -- Anna loses her family and is ostracized by those around her in a social downfall. Interwoven with the story of Konstantin Levin and Princess Kitty Shcerbatsky, this epic work is a timeless novel of desire, weakness, and the search for love. (RUS81, $17.00)
  Anna Karenina
Antler on the Sea, the Yup'ik and Chukchi of the Russian Far East  •  Anna Kerttula
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2000 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
A portrait of the daily life, culture and economy of a typical village along the Chukotka Peninsula. Yup'ik hunters of sea mammals, nomadic Chukchi reindeer herders, and Russian newcomers live and work side-by-side in the village of Sireneki, where the author, an anthropologist, lived for 18 months. Sireniki, like many villages in chukotka, was originally inhabited by the Yup'ik but today accommodates the Chucki that were settled in cooperative Reindeer farms along with the Russian teachers and administrators who came from outside the region, an instructive cultural mix. An insightful portrait of contemporary life for those lucky enough to travel to Provideniya and villages along the Bering Sea. (RUS100, $24.95)
  Antler on the Sea, the Yup'ik and Chukchi of the Russian Far East
The Art and Architecture of Russia  •  George Hamilton  •  Judith Gordon
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1992 •  PAPER  • 482 PAGES
An informed, engaging and comprehensive history of the art and architecture of Western Russia from the beginnings of Kievan Rus through the revolution and Russian empire, first published in 1954. It includes a splendid discussion of the development of St. Petersburg in the 18th and 19th centuries. Organized largely by geography, it's a good handbook for the traveler that goes beyond Moscow and St. Petersburg to include Kiev, Novgorod, Pskov and Vladimir-Suzdal. With 314 black-and-white illustrations. (RUS38, $35.00)
  The Art and Architecture of Russia
The Avengers, A Jewish War Story  •  Rich Cohen
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  PAPER  • 262 PAGES
Cohen conveys the passion, persistence and verve of three kids from the Jewish ghetto, who went from the streets of Vilna to fighting the Germans and, eventually, a Kibbutz north of Tel Aviv. Cohen, who first met Ruzka, Abba and Vitka on a family trip to Israel in 1977, has fashioned a suspenseful, riveting story from the tale of their remarkable lives. With sections on ghetto, forest, city and desert. Abba Kovner, who died in 1987, a poet, soldier and public figure in Israel, designed the Diaspora Museum in Tel Aviv. (BLT16, $14.95)
  The Avengers, A Jewish War Story
Balanchine, A Biography  •  Bernard Taper
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1996 •  PAPER  • 448 PAGES
Taper sorts out the controversial legacy of the legendary choreographer in this study of his life. A newly added epilogue to this reprint of the original 1984 work examines how ballet been affected by Balanchine's death. (RUS193, $31.95)
 
Baltic States Map  •  Freytag & Berndt
MAP
A double-sided detailed map of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, at a scale of 1:400,000. Two Sides. 48x34 inches. (BLT06, $14.95)
  Baltic States Map
Baroque and Rococo Art  •  Germain Bazin
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1985 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
An excellent illustrated survey of Baroque and Rococo art and architecture, this volume in the acclaimed "World of Art" series is a good companion to the golden age of Middle Europe. (EUR53, $21.95)
  Baroque and Rococo Art
Birds of Europe  •  Lars Svensson
FIELD GUIDE •  2010 •  PAPER  • 416 PAGES • FAVORITE
This Princeton Field Guide features 3,500 illustrations by Killian Mullarney and Dan Zetterstrom. Color plates depict every species -- and sometimes several different variants -- for 722 birds found from the Urals to the Atlantic, Scandinavia to the Middle East. (FG47, $29.95)
  Birds of Europe
Black Earth, A Journey Through Russia After the Fall  •  Andrew Meier
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2005 •  PAPER  • 516 PAGES
Meier, a journalist who covered Russia for Time from 1996-2001, ventures outside the Kremlin for this portrait of Russia and of the lives of typical Russians since the collapse of the Soviet Union. He travels South, North, East and West to war-torn Chechnya, the industrial northern city of Norilisk, forgotten Sakhalin, and progressive St. Petersburg. An insightful portrait much in the spirit of David Remnick's Resurrection. (RUS236, $16.95)
  Black Earth, A Journey Through Russia After the Fall
The Blue Flower  •  Penelope Fitzgerald
LITERATURE •  1995 •  PAPER  • 225 PAGES
Set in the Age of Goethe, this exquisitely written short novel is a fictional account of the life of the Romantic poet Novalis (here called 'Fritz'). It's a spare, illuminating portrait of the daily drudgeries, petty formalities, and especially the romantic frustrations of a man who's ahead of his time. It also paints a vivid picture of German intellectual and mercantile life in the late 1700s. (GER21, $13.00)
  The Blue Flower
Bradt Guide Latvia  •  Chris Baister  •  Chris Patrick
GUIDEBOOK •  2007 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
A comprehensive guide for the traveler from the popular and informative British series. (BLT20, $23.99)
  Bradt Guide Latvia
Bradt Guide Lithuania  •  Gordon McLachlan
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
A practical guide in the popular Bradt series, featuring information on Lithuanian art, history and culture, as well as good travel information. (BLT21, $25.99)
 
The Bronze Horseman  •  Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin
LITERATURE •  1992 •  PAPER  • 80 PAGES
Pushkin's epic poem was based on actual events, the flooding of his beloved St. Petersburg. (RUS281, $14.50)
 
The Brothers Karamazov  •  Fyodor Dostoevsky  •  Larissa Volokhonsky  •  Richard Pevear
LITERATURE •  1991 •  PAPER  • 832 PAGES
Dostoyevsky's final masterpiece, the introspective, philosophical novel of four very different brothers dealing with the murder of their father. This edition is an acclaimed recent translation. (RUS108, $18.00)
 
Buddenbrooks, the Decline of a Family  •  Thomas Mann
LITERATURE •  1994 •  HARD COVER  • 784 PAGES
Banned and burned by Hitler, this is Mann's masterpiece about the decline of a German family at the end of the 19th century. A chronicle of middle-class life, it is the story of a family subverting its own traditions for the sake of modernity. The Nobel Prize-winning author wrote this first, and perhaps his greatest, novel when he was only 25. Mann was raised in a prosperous merchant family in Lubeck. (GER22, $26.00)
  Buddenbrooks, the Decline of a Family
The Burgermeister's Daughter, Scandal in a Sixteenth-Century German Town  •  Steven Ozment
HISTORY •  1997 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
Meticulously researched and absorbing, this narrative by a Harvard historian traces the legal battle of the daughter of a well-to-do family who was thrown out of her home and disinherited in 1525. It's a true story expertly drawn from letters and court records, rich in details of life in a 16th-century German town. (GER25, $13.99)
  The Burgermeister's Daughter, Scandal in a Sixteenth-Century German Town
Burning Lights  •  Bella Chagall  •  Marc Chagall  •  Norbert Guterman
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1988 •  PAPER  • 268 PAGES
A memoir of growing up in the city of Vitebsk, Belarus in the beginning of the 20th century. Illustrated by the author's husband (famous artist Marc Chagall), this is a woman's story of life in traditional Belorussian society. (RUS122, $19.00)
 
Carmen and Other Stories  •  Prosper Merimee  •  Nicholas Jotcham
LITERATURE •  1999 •  PAPER  • 361 PAGES
A sophisticated Parisian, Merimee preferred tales of high drama, banditry, outlaws and outcasts set in exotic locales, preferably in the past. This collection of nine stories includes: Carmen, the source for the opera; Columba, set in Corsica; the Etruscan Vase, one of his Parisian tales; The Storming of the Redoubt, involving Napoleon's 1812 Russian campaign; and Lokis, set in the forests of Medieval Lithuania. (FRN201, $13.95)
 
Catherine the Great  •  Henri Troyat
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1994 •  PAPER  • 377 PAGES
One of the world's most notable biographers creates a grand portrait of a great monarch. This Russian-born French biographer of Tolstoy, Chekhov, Turgenev, Pushkin, Dostoevsky, and Gogol weaves a rich tapestry of history that reads like a novel. Seizing power from her husband and second cousin Peter III, Catherine fights and beats the Turks, defeats rebellion, partitions Poland, raises the prestige of Russia in Europe by corresponding with French philosophers and buying western art, and brings vast new lands under her 34-year reign. (RUS10, $20.00)
  Catherine the Great
Catherine the Great, A Short History  •  Isabel De Madariaga
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2002 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
A brief, balanced biography of Catherine the Great, covering her life, influence and times. Written by a noted scholar of Russian history, the book offers an excellent overview of the political and social climate of 18th-century Russia. De Madariaga begins the book with a short, vigorous chapter: Catherine seizes power. The woman who ruled from 1762 until her death in 1796 had no claim to the throne. For serious students, Russia in the Age of Catherine the Great, also by De Madariaga, offers more detail. A Yale Note Bene paperback. (RUS105, $14.95)
  Catherine the Great, A Short History
Central Europe, Enemies, Neighbors, Friends  •  Lonnie Johnson
HISTORY •  2010 •  PAPER  • 382 PAGES
An academic survey of the social, political, and economic past of Central Europe, and the conflicts that stir modern-day European politics. From medieval to modern times, the formative historical events of Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, and Croatia, are all introduced. Johnson is especially successful in analyzing the struggle of small nations in the face of imperial powers and how these experiences have created a diverse European heritage. With maps. Awarded an Outstanding Academic Book of 1997 by Choice. (EUR69, $47.25)
  Central Europe, Enemies, Neighbors, Friends
A Century of Ambivalence, The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union, 1881 to the Present  •  Zvi Y. Gitelman
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 321 PAGES
A strikingly illustrated history of Jewish life in Russia, originally published in 1988 and expanded for this second edition. With two new chapters on the fate of Jews and Judaism in the former Soviet Union, 200 black-and-white photographs from YIVO Institute for Jewish Research and three maps. Zvi Gitelman is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Jean and Samuel Frankel Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. (RUS172, $24.95)
 
Clara's Grand Tour, Travels With a Rhinoceros in Eighteenth-century Europe  •  Glynis Ridley
HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
The entertaining history of a most unusual eighteenth-century European celebrity. Clara the Indian rhinoceros was brought to Europe in 1741 by the Dutch sea captain Douwemout Van der Meer, and toured for seventeen years, to the delight of heads of state such as Louis XV and Frederick the Great. A marvelous and unique look at the introduction of Eastern wildlife into the Western world. (FRN536, $12.00)
  Clara's Grand Tour, Travels With a Rhinoceros in Eighteenth-century Europe
The Coming Anarchy, Shattering the Dreams of the Post Cold War  •  Robert D. Kaplan
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Topical essays by the prolific Robert Kaplan. (WLD51, $15.95)
 
Commonwealth of Independent States Map  •  Freytag & Berndt
MAP
A double-sided map of the entire CIS, divided into Western Russia (at a scale of 1:2,000,000 and eastern Russia (1:8,000,000). The map of Western Russia is the same plate as that for Eastern Europe (Item EUR36). Two Sides. 35x49 inches. (RUS133, $14.95)
  Commonwealth of Independent States Map
The Complete Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tales  •  Hans Christian Andersen
LITERATURE •  1993 •  HARD COVER  • 804 PAGES
How could we resist? It's hard to contemplate a visit to Copenhagen without revisiting these classic tales by its most famous citizen. This illustrated edition includes 159 greats, including "The Ugly Duckling" and, of course, "The Little Mermaid." (DMK01, $14.99)
 
A Concise History of Germany  •  Mary Fulbrook
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 277 PAGES
This essential short history of Germany -- a whirlwind survey in less than 300 pages -- explores the relationships between social, political and cultural factors in this land located in the center of Europe. It covers the Middle Ages, Reformation and Counter Reformation, the Thirty-Years War, the Peace of Westphalia, the rise of Prussia, the unification of Germany under Bismarck, imperial Germany, the Weimar Republic and its collapse, Hitler and the Holocaust, divided and reunited Germany. (GER13, $28.99)
  A Concise History of Germany
A Concise History of the Russian Revolution  •  Peter Dimock  •  Richard Pipes
HISTORY •  1996 •  PAPER  • 431 PAGES
A scholarly analysis of the Russian revolution by Harvard Scholar Richard Pipes, from the events that catalyzed the revolution, to its conclusion and aftermath. Includes glossary, chronology, and photographs of important players of the Revolution. (RUS98, $17.95)
 
Confessions of a Fallen Standard-Bearer  •  Andrei Makine
LITERATURE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 144 PAGES
The celebrated contemporary Russian author follows two ideologically fervent boys, Arkady and Alyosha, as they come of age in post-Stalin Soviet Union. (RUS136, $21.95)
 
The Corrections  •  Jonathan Franzen
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 592 PAGES
It's really that good -- a dazzling novel of life and love and family and holidays that follows the peregrinations of the Lamberts -- father, mother and offspring -- from New York to Philadelphia to Vilnius (Lithuania). A big, heart wrenching, comic book (and pretty dead on about Eastern European politics). (EUR122, $16.00)
  The Corrections
The Cossacks  •  Leo Tolstoy  •  Peter Constantine  •  Cynthia Ozick
LITERATURE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 192 PAGES
A fresh translation of Tolstoy's 1863 semi-autobiographical novel about a young Muscovite and his military adventures in the rough-and-ready Caucasus. The book is, in part, a portrait of the Cossacks -- and an account of falling in love. (RUS241, $13.00)
  The Cossacks
Coup de Grace  •  Marguerite Yourcenar
LITERATURE •  1996 •  PAPER  • 151 PAGES
A novel set against the backdrop of the Latvian War of Independence in the aftermath of WWI. (BLT26, $16.00)
 
Cracks in the Iron Closet, Travels in Gay and Lesbian Russia  •  David Tuller
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 344 PAGES
A soul-searching reporter from the San Francisco Chronicle out and about in 1990s Russia. Tuller mixes travelogue with history, social analysis, and lots of comentary on his circle of friends and aquaintances (including the lesbian he fell for). It's an intimate, slightly surreal portrait of an emerging gay subculture in modern Russia. (RUS149, $20.00)
 
Crime and Punishment  •  Fyodor Dostoevsky  •  David McDuff
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 647 PAGES
The greatest detective story ever told and an inspiration to Freud in developing his psychoanalytic theory, this thriller of murder and redemption, set in St. Petersburg and redolent of its atmosphere, details the tragic, personal consequences of isolation, alienation, cynicism, and nihilism and sets the stage for the great social tragedy to come in the 20th century. (RUS18, $15.00)
  Crime and Punishment
The Crown Jewels, The British Secrets at the Heart of the KGB's Archives  •  Nigel West  •  Oleg Tsarev
HISTORY •  1999 •  HARD COVER  • 384 PAGES
A lively account of Soviet intelligence activity in Britain from the end of World War I to the late 1950s. West is a prolific British military historian specializing in espionage. (SPY21, $55.00)
 
Days of Defeat and Victory  •  Yegor Gaidar
HISTORY •  1999 •  HARD COVER  • 342 PAGES
Gaidar, an architect of Yeltsin reforms, offers his lively, candid views on the dramatic events of the 1990s in this eyewitness account and memoir. (RUS231, $30.00)
 
The Diary of a Young Girl, The Definitive Edition  •  Anne Frank
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1995 •  PAPER  • 340 PAGES
The classic story of an adolescent Jewish girl's life and thoughts while in hiding with her family in Nazi-occupied Holland. Anne's simple wisdom and optimism, juxtaposed against the horrid realities of the world outside and her inevitable fate, make this a very powerful book, considerably enhanced by newly restored material. (NTH05, $13.00)
  The Diary of a Young Girl, The Definitive Edition
Doctor Zhivago  •  Boris Pasternak  •  Richard Pevear  •  Larissa Volokhonsky
LITERATURE •  2011 •  PAPER  • 544 PAGES
This epic story of life and love -- set against the backdrop of the first half of the 20th century -- takes in both World Wars and the Revolution. Banned in Russia upon publication in the 1950s, it was later made into the classic film by David Lean. (RUS222, $16.95)
  Doctor Zhivago
Dreams of My Russian Summers  •  Andrei Makine
LITERATURE •  2011 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
In this widely praised first novel, Makine writes evocatively of the coming of age of a young boy in the Soviet Union of the 1960's and 70's. (RUS266, $14.95)
  Dreams of My Russian Summers
East of the Sun & West of the Moon, Old Tales from the North  •  George Webbe Dasent
LITERATURE •  2008 •  HARD COVER  • 208 PAGES • FAMILY
The Norse equivalent and counterpart to the German collection by the brothers Grimm, this anthology of 15 illustrated folk tales contains the famous title story along with "Why the Sea Is Salt" and "The Three Billy Goats Gruff." The original Norwegian text was published in Christiania in 1843; George Webbe Dasent's translation first appeared in England in 1858. Delightful, fanciful reading for the entire family. (SCN06, $40.00)
  East of the Sun & West of the Moon, Old Tales from the North
The Eastern Front, 1914-1917  •  Norman Stone
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
A classic study of Russia's contribution to the First World War. First published in 1975, before Soviet archives were opened, this work details the Russian defeat and how it affected the 1917 revolution. (WAR76, $16.95)
 
Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe  •  Henri Pirenne
HISTORY •  1936 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Pirenne, an important economic historian, traces the economic and social development of Western Europe from the end of the Roman Empire to the middle of the 15th century in this classic book, first published in 1936. It gives a concise picture of medieval Western Europe, including social disturbances, economic and social catastrophes, famine and the Black Death. A separate section on the North Sea and the Baltic contains specific references to the Hanseatic League. (EUR18, $15.95)
  Economic and Social History of Medieval Europe
The Empress & the Architect, British Architecture and Gardens at the Court of Catherine the Great  •  Dmitri Shvidkovsky
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1996 •  HARD COVER  • 273 PAGES
A gorgeous oversize survey of the 18th-century palaces, towns, parks and gardens in Russia designed by Charles Cameron, the Scottish architect to the court of Catherine the Great. With 190 black-and-white and 100 color illustrations, including architectural drawings and engravings, watercolors and modern color photographs. Shvidkovsky is a leading historian of Russian architecture. Appropriate attention is devoted to Catherine's Palace at Pushkin (Tsarkoye Selo) and Pavlovsk. (RUS259, $85.00)
 
The End of Eurasia, Russia on the Border Between Geopolitics and Globalization  •  Dmitri Trenin
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 340 PAGES
A thought provoking analysis of Russia's foreign policy by the deputy director of the Carnegie Moscow Center (and a retired Russian army officer). Trenin -- who argues for a Euro-centered Russia and integration with the West -- looks at Russia's western face, its southern borders with the Islamic republics of Central Asia and the far east, increasingly dominated by China. (RUS163, $24.95)
 
Estonia and the Estonians  •  Toivo U. Raun
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 366 PAGES
A scholarly, comprehensive history of Estonia from prehistory to the 1990s in the Hoover Institution's "Studies of Nationalities" series. (BLT07, $24.95)
  Estonia and the Estonians
Eugene Onegin, A Novel in Verse  •  James E. Falen  •  Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin
LITERATURE •  1998 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
A master work by one of Russia's most respected poets. Set in early 19th-century Russia, Pushkin's verse novel tells the tale of three men and three women, interwoven with a variety of literal philosophical and autobiographical tangents. (RUS101, $9.95)
  Eugene Onegin, A Novel in Verse
Eugene Onegin, A Novel in Verse  •  Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin  •  Vladimir Nabokov
LITERATURE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 362 PAGES
In this translation of Pushkin's epic poem set in 19th-century Russia, the great novelist Nabokov brings the spark of Pushkin's original words to life. (RUS290, $24.95)
 
Eyewitness Guide Amsterdam  •  Eyewitness Guides
GUIDEBOOK •  2011 •  PAPER  • 312 PAGES
A wonderful guide to Amsterdam, filled with drawings, photographs and thumbnail sketches. The highly visual format covers a wide range of information and is very well indexed, with color-coded pages for easy use. Slim and attractive, it also includes detailed maps and cutaway drawings of landmarks. Includes Rotterdam and Delft. (NTH01, $25.00)
  Eyewitness Guide Amsterdam
Eyewitness Guide Moscow  •  Eyewitness Guides
GUIDEBOOK •  2010 •  PAPER  • 263 PAGES
An outstanding guide to Moscow, its culture, history and attractions, with excellent local maps, site plans and hundreds of color photographs. It includes a select, annotated listing of recommended hotels, restaurants, cafes and shops. (RUS164, $23.00)
  Eyewitness Guide Moscow
Faberge in the Royal Collection  •  Caroline De Guitaut
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 240 PAGES
A handsome study of Faberge art and the British Royal Family. Includes essays on the history of the collection, royal collectors, and Faberge's enduring influence. With 220 illustrations, 200 in color. (RUS215, $50.00)
 
Fathers and Sons  •  Ivan Turgenev
LITERATURE •  1975 •  PAPER  • 295 PAGES
This book is the original exploration of the generation gap, where the progressive, atheistic and scientific nihilism of the radical Bazarov clashes with the traditional values of his elders. The most accessible of the great Russian novelists, Turgenev was the first to create the modern revolutionary, the outsider, and the first to structure his story around the psychology of his characters instead of plot. More accurately translated than other Turgenev classics (RUS19, $13.00)
 
The First Circle  •  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn  •  Thomas Whitney
LITERATURE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 580 PAGES
Set in Moscow, Solzhenitsyn's The First Circle follows the fate of Gleb Nerzhin, his scientist colleagues and fellow prisoners and how they negotiate the horrors of Soviet Russia in the years following WWII. Like his protagonist, the author was a mathematician forced to work in a Stalinist-era prison run as a research institute. Solzhenitsyn was the winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature. (RUS260, $16.95)
 
First Person, An Astonishingly Frank Self-Portrait by Russia's President  •  Vladimir Putin
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 208 PAGES
A book-length series of interviews with Russia's leader, organized chronologically. The question and answer sessions cover the man, his politics and rise to power. Translated by Catherine A. Fitzpatrick. (RUS161, $16.00)
  First Person, An Astonishingly Frank Self-Portrait by Russia's President
Five Plays  •  Anton Chekhov  •  Ronald Hingley
LITERATURE •  2008 •  PAPER  • 294 PAGES
A comprehensive collection of Chekhov's major plays, including "Ivanov," "The Seagull," "Uncle Vanya," "Three Sisters," and "The Cherry Orchard." (RUS88, $8.95)
 
The Fixer  •  Bernard Malamud
LITERATURE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 352 PAGES
Set in Tsarist Russia, this well-known novel by Malamud tells the story of a young Jewish boy from Kiev wrongly accused of murder. Based on true events, the book confronts anti-semitism in Russia during the first decades of the 20th century. This classic novel (first published in 1966) was the first book ever to win both a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize. (RUS271, $15.00)
  The Fixer
Fodor's Amsterdam's 25 Best  •  Fodor's
GUIDEBOOK •  2011 •  PAPER  • 128 PAGES
A shirt-pocket guide to Amsterdam, this slim book includes a separate excellent map of the center of the city and a 96-page shirt-pocket guide with essential information on its highlights, including restaurant recommendations and sightseeing. (NTH16, $11.99)
  Fodor's Amsterdam's 25 Best
Fodor's London's 25 Best  •  Fodor's
GUIDEBOOK •  2012 •  PAPER  • 176 PAGES
This slim guide to London includes a separate map of the city's center and a 96-page pocket book with essential information on its highlights, including restaurant recommendations and sightseeing. (GBR08, $12.99)
  Fodor's London's 25 Best
Fodor's Moscow and St. Petersburg  •  Salwa Jabado
GUIDEBOOK •  2011 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
This comprehensive guide in the Fodor's Gold series features solid practical information on sights, excursions, restaurants, hotels and nightlife. With a chapter on the cities of the Golden Ring. Fifth edition. (RUS03, $19.99)
  Fodor's Moscow and St. Petersburg
Food in Russian History and Culture  •  Joyce Toomre  •  Musya Glants
FOOD •  1997 •  PAPER
Food is the chosen lens for the 14 cultural historians who contributed essays to this scholarly, wide-ranging book. Topics range from Tolstoy's vegetarianism to starvation under Stalin to Soviet restaurants. (RUS143, $34.95)
 
Footprint Tallinn  •  Clare Thomson
GUIDEBOOK •  2006 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
Nuts-and-bolts information, plus an overview of history and culture, geared for the independent traveler. (BLT27, $12.95)
  Footprint Tallinn
From Karamzin to Bunin: An Anthology of Russian Short Stories  •  Carl Proffer
ANTHOLOGY •  1969 •  PAPER  • 468 PAGES
This anthology stands out by including a broad selection of literary masterpieces from the earliest Russian prose to the years before the revolution, the best short works by each of the authors, and reliable translations of such masterpieces as Pushkin's "The Queen of Spades," Tolstoy's "The Death of Ivan Ilych," Gogol's "The Overcoat," and several of Chekhov's best-loved stories. (RUS08, $24.00)
  From Karamzin to Bunin: An Anthology of Russian Short Stories
From Nyet to Da: Understanding the Russians  •  Yale Richmond
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2003 •  PAPER  • 219 PAGES
A cultural portrait of the Russians for the traveler, covering Russia's geography and culture, character, state and society. With chapters on "Personal Encounters" and "Negotiating with Russians." Richmond is a former U.S. Foreign Service Officer who spent 20 years in Russia. (RUS96, $23.95)
 
The German Way  •  Hyde Flippo
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1997 •  PAPER  • 138 PAGES • BEST SELLER
A slim volume on the German-speaking cultural psyche, this highly readable, humorous account of the cultural quirks and social etiquette of the German-speaking nations is a great resource for anyone seeking insight into why the Germans do what they do. Short chapters, arranged alphabetically by topic, make for a quick study on the complexities of Teutonic customs. (GER12, $17.00)
  The German Way
The Germans  •  Gordon A. Craig
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1991 •  PAPER  • 361 PAGES
Informative and fascinating, this book by German historian Gordon A. Craig provides valuable insights into the nature of the German character. Craig explores the complex paradoxes of German identity -- romantic and conservative, idealistic and practical, proud and insecure -- through chapters on religion, money, Jews, women, literature and society, Berlin and language. (GER10, $18.00)
  The Germans
Germany Adventure Map  •  National Geographic
2012 •  MAP
A double-sided full color map of Germany at a scale of 1:825,000 with good shaded relief, topographic detail, roads, waterways and basic travel information. Printed on waterproof, tear-resistant paper. Two Sides. 56x39 inches. (GER07, $11.95)
  Germany Adventure Map
Gorbachev and Yeltsin As Leaders  •  George Breslauer
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 3831 PAGES
An astute, balanced political analysis. Breslauer -- a professor at Berkeley -- has also published Khrushchev and Brezhnev as Leaders: Building Authority in Soviet Politics (1982). (RUS156, $32.99)
 
The Gothic Enterprise, A Guide to Understanding the Medieval Cathedral  •  Robert A. Scott
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  2005 •  PAPER  • 294 PAGES
Scott, whose interest in the history of cathedrals began when he first saw the magnificent Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Salisbury, England, takes his reader on a historical, architectural and sociological tour of the magnificent spires and stained-glass windows that dot the landscape of Europe. It's an accessible, personable overview. (EUR190, $21.95)
  The Gothic Enterprise, A Guide to Understanding the Medieval Cathedral
The Great Railway Bazaar  •  Paul Theroux
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
Theroux's vintage 1970s journeys across Asia by train display all his talent for portraiture, ego and the dismissive aside. It's great fun. He takes every two-bit train he can find from London across Europe, Turkey and the Middle East, India, Japan and China, returning home via the Trans-Siberian Express. (ASA40, $14.95)
  The Great Railway Bazaar
The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: Vol. I  •  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn  •  Thomas Whitney
LITERATURE •  2007 •  PAPER  • 672 PAGES
A masterpiece of literature and history, this novel documents the horrors of Russia's prison system under communism. Based on Solzhenitsyn's first-hand experiences, it is a powerful and unforgettable work of suffering and redemption. This is the first volume in "The Gulag Archipelago" trilogy. (RUS113, $21.99)
  The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: Vol. I
The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: Vol. III  •  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn  •  Thomas Whitney
LITERATURE •  2007 •  PAPER  • 570 PAGES
A masterpiece of literature and history, this novel documents the horrors of Russia's prison system under communism. Based on Solzhenitsyn's first-hand experiences, it is a powerful and unforgettable work of suffering and redemption. This is the third volume in "The Gulag Archipelago" trilogy. (RUS114, $21.99)
  The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: Vol. III
Hadji Murad  •  Leo Tolstoy  •  Aylmer Maude
LITERATURE •  2003 •  PAPER  • 192 PAGES
A short novel set in the 19th-century Caucasus, concerning -- in part -- conflicts between the occupying Russians and Muslim groups in the region. Tolstoy, who spent four years in the Russian army in the Caucasus, based his story on a real-life mountain warrior. Originally published posthumously in 1923, this edition includes an introduction by John Burt Foster that puts the novel in its historical context. (CCS18, $11.95)
  Hadji Murad
Hans Christian Andersen, The Life of a Storyteller  •  Jackie Wullschlager
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2002 •  PAPER  • 496 PAGES
The acclaimed biography of Copenhagen's most famous denizen, who rose from his lot as a washerwoman's son to dine with princes and literary lions -- yet who died alone and unhappy. Wullschlager, an arts critic at the Financial Times, has written a thorough, and thoroughly grown-up, treatment of Andersen. (DMK13, $21.00)
 
Here Is Where We Meet  •  John Berger
LITERATURE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
This novel weaves a portrait of several European countries through encounters with the dead, from the narrator's mother, whom he discovers on a park bench in Lisbon, to a childhood friend wandering a market in Krakow. "The dead don't stay where they are buried," the protagonist's mother tells him, and this becomes the mantra for this most unusual journey through Europe's history and people. (EUR189, $15.00)
  Here Is Where We Meet
A History of Russia  •  Nicholas Riasanovsky
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 776 PAGES
First published nearly 40 years ago, this comprehensive history of Russia -- now in its eighth edition -- remains a popular survey for students and travelers with a serious interest in history. It's a scholarly, balanced survey from Russia's Kievan origins through Imperial and Soviet Russia to Yeltsin and the new Russian Federation. (RUS130, $74.95)
  A History of Russia
A History of Russia  •  George Vernadsky
HISTORY •  1986 •  PAPER  • 520 PAGES
A popular college text. (RUS174, $32.00)
 
A History of Russian Music, From Kamarinskaya to Babi Yar  •  Francis Maes  •  Arnold Pomerans
MUSIC •  2001 •  HARD COVER  • 440 PAGES
A scholarly social history of Russian music and the influence of notable Russian composers starting in the early 19th century with Mikhail Glinka and covering up through the 1970s with the works of Shostakovich. (RUS223, $60.00)
 
House of the Dead  •  Fyodor Dostoevsky  •  David McDuff
LITERATURE •  1986 •  PAPER  • 362 PAGES
Dostoyevsky's semi-autobiographical novel of a man forced to endure ten years in a Siberian prison for the murder of his wife. Accused as a political subversive, Dostoyevsky himself spent four years in a prison camp. (RUS261, $12.00)
  House of the Dead
How Russia Shaped the Modern World: From Art to Anti-Semitism, Ballet to Bolshevism  •  Steven G. Marks
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 408 PAGES
This wide-ranging book focuses on Russian contributions to art, literature, politics and ideas of 19th- and 20th-century Europe and America. Marks considers artists and thinkers including Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Diaghilev, Stanislavsky, Kandinsky, and Malevich. (RUS245, $29.95)
 
I, Maya Plisetskayar  •  Maya Plisetskaya  •  Antonia W. Bouis
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2001 •  HARD COVER  • 448 PAGES
A memoir of dance set against a backdrop of political turmoil. Plisetskaya, a prominent Russian ballerina, bitterly describes the persecution of her family and her struggles as an artist under the Soviet Regime. (RUS254, $50.00)
 
The Icon and the Axe, An Interpretive History of Russian Culture  •  James H. Billington
HISTORY •  1970 •  PAPER  • 786 PAGES
From Kievan beginnings through 600 years to the Soviet era, this book presents the intellectual currents that have shaped Russia and her traditions. It's a cultural and artistic history, written by the Librarian of Congress: a comprehensive, intellectual investigation of the spiritual and ideological forces that led to the development of Russia. (RUS09, $24.00)
  The Icon and the Axe, An Interpretive History of Russian Culture
Igor Stravinsky, An Autobiography  •  Igor Stravinsky
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1998 •  PAPER  • 176 PAGES
A brief account of the life and work of Stravinsky (1882-1971), by the conductor himself, covering the first 50 years of his life in St. Petersburg, France and Switzerland. Originally published in 1956. (MUS18, $17.95)
 
Images of Space, St. Petersburg in the Visual and Verbal Arts  •  Grigory Kaganov  •  Sidney Monas
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1997 •  HARD COVER  • 238 PAGES
A slim, academic study, featuring 75 black-and-white engravings, paintings and illustrations. This is not an architectural guide to St. Petersburg in the traditional sense. Instead of studying the buildings, parks, and bridges of the historic city, Kaganov delves into changing ideas about spatial representation, looking at the way St. Petersburg's urban spaces -- and the depiction of them in art and literature-- have changed over the centuries. (RUS42, $59.95)
 
In Europe, Travels Through the Twentieth Century  •  Geert Mak
HISTORY •  2008 •  PAPER  • 896 PAGES
Dutch journalist Mak's big, bold account of Europe on the threshold of the 21st century bridges travel, journalism and history. He reports from Lisbon and Helsinki to Moscow, Istanbul, the D-day beaches and other momentous sites, deftly profiling the people and events that have defined modern Europe. (EUR254, $21.00)
  In Europe, Travels Through the Twentieth Century
Insight City Guide St. Petersburg  •  Brian Bell
GUIDEBOOK •  2005 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
This eyecatching guidebook features beautiful full-color photographs, illuminating area maps, a street atlas and information about transport and accommodations. With a pullout restaurant map guide. (RUS274, $15.95)
  Insight City Guide St. Petersburg
Insight Guide Poland  •  Insight Guides
GUIDEBOOK •  2004 •  PAPER  • 416 PAGES
A handsomely illustrated introduction to Poland, this guidebook features essays on history, culture and economy, as well as practical information for the traveler. With 15 helpful maps and numerous color photographs. (PLD14, $23.95)
  Insight Guide Poland
The Kalevala  •  Keith Bosley
LITERATURE •  2009 •  PAPER  • 679 PAGES
This national epic of Finland, based on ancient heroic poetry, was a rallying flag for national aspirations as Finland struggled to break away from Russia in the 19th century. So important is this great literary monument that Finland celebrates February 28 as Kalevala day. Incorporating incantation and humor and including a role for magic, this classic informs some of Sibelius' greatest music. 1999 marks the 150th anniversary of the first edition of the poem. (SCN14, $15.95)
 
Khrushchev, The Man and His Era  •  William Taubman
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2004 •  PAPER  • 908 PAGES
A definitive, Pulitzer Prize-winning account of the life of Nikita Khrushchev, which also serves a detailed portrait of Soviet Russia and the legacy of Stalin. Taubman is professor of political science at Amherst (RUS257, $17.95)
 
Kiev: A Portrait, 1800-1917  •  Michael F. Hamm
HISTORY •  1996 •  PAPER  • 304 PAGES
From medieval center to important city in Imperial Russia, this scholarly book is a wonderfully informative cultural history of the city and especially its 19th-century legacy. (RUS56, $45.00)
  Kiev: A Portrait, 1800-1917
Kosmos, A Portrait of the Russian Space Age  •  Svetlana Boym  •  Adam Bartos
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2001 •  HARD COVER  • 176 PAGES
A portfolio of 100 photographs of the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, with an accompanying essay by Harvard professor Svetlana Boym. The somber photographs were taken between 1995 and 1997 in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union. (RUS184, $40.00)
  Kosmos, A Portrait of the Russian Space Age
Legacies of Twentieth-Century Dance  •  Lynn Garafola
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2005 •  PAPER  • 468 PAGES
A marvelously illustrated and scholarly collection of essays on the evolution of dance in the 20th century. The four sections of the book focus on the Ballet Ruses, female dancers, New York as the dance capital of the world and questions of memory and reconstruction. (RUS256, $32.95)
 
Lenin, A New Biography  •  Dmitri Volkogonov
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1994 •  HARD COVER  • 529 PAGES
A well regarded biography. (RUS250, $69.00)
 
Letters from Russia  •  Marquis De Custine  •  Anka Muhlstein
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 654 PAGES
An authoritative edition of Astolphe de Custine's scathing, insightful -- and observant -- account of the people, culture and politics of St. Petersburg and Moscow circa 1839. George Kennan called this book the best thing ever written about Russia, no doubt in part because of de Custine's trenchant observations on Russian despotism (the Soviets also banned the book). This is the 1843 translation, edited, revised and with an introduction by de Custine's biographer, Anka Muhlstein. (RUS166, $24.95)
  Letters from Russia
Life and Fate  •  Vasily Grossman
LITERATURE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 896 PAGES
Modeled on Tolstoy's War and Peace, this novel gives a sweeping account of Soviet life during World War II. (RUS299, $24.95)
  Life and Fate
Literary Russia, A Guide  •  Anna Benn  •  Rosamund Bartlett
LITERATURE •  2006 •  HARD COVER  • 528 PAGES
Back in print! Organized geographically, this guide and literary companion includes the homes, museums and literary landmarks of Dostoevsky, Pushkin, Nabokov and other Russian masters. (RUS45, $37.50)
  Literary Russia, A Guide
Lonely Planet Baltic Phrasebook  •  Paul Jokubaitis  •  Jana Teteris  •  Lisa Trei
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2004 •  PAPER  • 284 PAGES
A handy phrasebook for the basics of Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian.This pocket guide focuses on pronunciation, basic grammar and essential vocabulary for the traveler. (BLT10, $8.99)
  Lonely Planet Baltic Phrasebook
Lonely Planet Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania  •  Lonely Planet
GUIDEBOOK •  2009 •  PAPER  • 456 PAGES
In its hallmark style, this practical guide to the Baltic nations by Lonely Planet features maps, a good overview of culture, history and language, and much nuts-and-bolts information on excursions, accommodations and sightseeing. With color photographs and excellent travel information. (BLT05, $25.99)
  Lonely Planet Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania
Lonely Planet Russian Phrasebook  •  James Jenkin  •  Inna Zaitseva
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2009 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
A handy shirtpocket phrasebook for Russian basics focusing on pronunciation, basic grammar and essential vocabulary for the traveler. (RUS111, $8.99)
  Lonely Planet Russian Phrasebook
Lonely Planet Scandinavia  •  Glenda Bendure  •  Ned Friary
GUIDEBOOK •  2011 •  PAPER  • 550 PAGES
An excellent practical guide to Scandinavian countries, as well as St. Petersburg and Tallinn, featuring a good overview of culture, history and nature, and plenty of information on excursions, accommodations and sightseeing. (SCN01, $25.99)
  Lonely Planet Scandinavia
Lonely Planet St. Petersburg  •  Lonely Planet
GUIDEBOOK •  2012 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
In its hallmark style, this practical guide to St Petersburg by Lonely Planet features maps, a good overview of culture, history and art, and a great deal of information on excursions, accommodations and sightseeing. Most of the book focuses on what to see, do, buy and eat in the city. With color photographs and excellent travel information. (RUS280, $21.99)
  Lonely Planet St. Petersburg
Lost Opportunity: What has Made Economic Reform in Russia so Difficult?  •  Marshall Goldman
HISTORY •  1996 •  PAPER  • 308 PAGES
An astute commentator, the author looks at Yeltsin's economic reforms and the changes wrought on the complex Russian economy since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Associate Director of the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard, the author is none too optimistic about the prospects for genuine reform. (RUS64, $21.95)
  Lost Opportunity: What has Made Economic Reform in Russia so Difficult?
Mammals of Europe  •  Priscilla Barrett  •  David W. MacDonald
FIELD GUIDE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
Published by Princeton, this is a field guide to land and marine mammals throughout Europe, both endemic and introduced. With more than 600 color illustrations of over 200 mammals, it's a comprehensive handbook, with detailed descriptions, range maps and commentary on behavior. (FG61, $38.50)
  Mammals of Europe
The Master and Margarita  •  Larissa Volokhonsky  •  Richa Pevear  •  Mikhail Bulgakov
LITERATURE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 402 PAGES
Hailed as "one of the greatest novels to ever come out of the Soviet Union" by the "New York Times," this book is impossible to categorize. It is part satire, part fairytale, part fable, part slapstick. It was written in the 1930s, the most repressive period of Stalin's reign, as an elaborate allegory to convey Michail Bulgakov's anti-Stalinist message, complete with a main character named Satan who is accompanied by his talking black cat. (RUS44, $14.00)
  The Master and Margarita
The Master of Petersburg  •  J.M. Coetzee
LITERATURE •  1995 •  PAPER  • 250 PAGES
Celebrated author Fyodor Dostoyevski becomes a literary character in Coetzee's novel of 19th-century Russia. Dostoyevski is summoned to St. Petersburg to investigate the suicide of his stepson. The mystery he soon becomes ensnared in illuminates the underworld of pre-revolutionary St. Petersburg. (RUS200, $16.00)
  The Master of Petersburg
The Memoirs of Catherine the Great  •  Catherine the Great  •  Mark Cruse  •  Hilde Hoogenboom
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2005 •  HARD COVER  • 352 PAGES
Catherine The Great's rule lasted from 1762 until her death in 1796; this collection of her memoirs begins some years before, upon her arrival in Russia as a German princess in 1744. An intimate insight into the life of the world-renowned ruler and her often uneasy adjustment to the world of Russian royalty. (RUS277, $26.95)
 
The Messiah of Stockholm, A Novel  •  Cynthia Ozick
LITERATURE •  1988 •  PAPER  • 141 PAGES
Set in the dark of Stockholm's winter, this atmospheric short novel follows the peregrinations of Lars Andemeing -- and his search for his father Bruno Schulz. (SWE11, $13.95)
  The Messiah of Stockholm, A Novel
Michelin Green Guide Scandinavia and Finland  •  Michelin Travel Publications
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 526 PAGES
A survey of the cities, villages and sites of Scandinavia in the classic Michelin style, featuring brief descriptions of all the major attractions, and with excellent full-color city maps. Organized alphabetically for easy reference, (SCN10, $21.95)
  Michelin Green Guide Scandinavia and Finland
Moscow, Governing the Socialist Metropolis  •  Timothy J. Colton
HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 939 PAGES
A scholarly, political history of Moscow from frontier town through Tsarist and Soviet transformations to the 1990s by a Harvard professor. It's a big book, nicely written, that will appeal to travelers with a serious interest in history. At almost 1,000 pages with the usual scholarly notes it's not for the feint of heart. (RUS157, $31.50)
 
Murder on the Leviathan  •  Boris Akunin  •  Andrew Bromfield
MYSTERY •  2005 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
Erast Fandorin, a young diplomat who moonlights as a detective and the hero of Akunin's novel "The Winter Queen" must match wits with the French police commissioner Gustave Gauche to determine which passenger aboard a ship destined for India murdered the Lord Littleby and his ten servants. Akunin pays homage to Agatha Christie with a bizarre and memorable cast of characters in this entertaining page-turner. (RUS225, $14.00)
  Murder on the Leviathan
Natasha's Dance, A Cultural History of Russia  •  Orlando Figes
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2003 •  PAPER  • 768 PAGES
In this lively cultural history, Figes looks at both the great works by Russian masters and longstanding folk traditions. The title is drawn from a scene of Tolstoy's War and Peace in which a European-educated countess performs a peasant dance and the monumental work is dedicated to this tension between Asia and Europe, peasants and nobility. (RUS180, $23.00)
  Natasha's Dance, A Cultural History of Russia
Nicholas and Alexandra  •  Robert Massie
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 613 PAGES
This is a fairy tale of true love turned tragic as Tsar Nicholas II, the handsome ruler of one-sixth of the earth, carries on the royal Russian tradition of marrying a German princess, Alexandra of Hesse. Their union produces four daughters and a hemophiliac son, the tsarevitch Alexis, whose disease only the evil monk Rasputin can treat. The stage is set for the downfall of the Romanov dynasty and imperial Russia and the coming of Communism. This entertaining and well-researched history traces the royal relationship and explores how a disease determined the destiny of rulers, the disintegration of the empire, and the course of Russian history. (RUS69, $20.00)
  Nicholas and Alexandra
No Fixed Points, Dance in the Twentieth Century  •  Malcolm McCormick  •  Nancy Reynolds
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 928 PAGES
A comprehensive history of 20th century dance in Europe and America. It's a readable, illustrated reference that offers both biographies of major dancers and choreographers, and critical analysis. (RUS255, $60.00)
 
The Northern Wars: War, State and Society in Northeastern Europe, 1558-1721  •  Robert I. Frost
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 401 PAGES
An illuminating, scholarly history of the struggle over Estonia, Livonia and control of the Nordic-Baltic region by Sweden, Prussia, and Russia. Frost covers the heavily militarized period between the 16th-century takeover of the Baltic empires of the knights of the Teutonic order and the 18th century, when mighty Poland-Lithuania was devoured by its neighbors. Largely ignored today as a historical power, the flow of Polish-Lithuanian grain, timber, hemp and pitch through the Baltic provided vital raw materials for the European economy in the 16th and 17th centuries. (BLT15, $71.60)
  The Northern Wars: War, State and Society in Northeastern Europe, 1558-1721
Norwegian Folk Tales  •  Peter Asbjornsen
ANTHOLOGY •  1982 •  PAPER  • 188 PAGES
This rich collection of stories, interpreted by a leading scholar on ancient traditions and tales, will delight both adults and children. (NOR06, $15.95)
  Norwegian Folk Tales
Notes from Underground  •  Fyodor Dostoevsky  •  Richard Pevear
LITERATURE •  1994 •  PAPER  • 160 PAGES
"I am a sick man... I am a wicked man." So begins Dostoevsky's darkly funny 1864 novel, an introspective psychological portrait of the Underground Man, one of Dostoevsky's most recognizable protagonists. A rich character study and an excellent glimpse of 19th-century St. Petersburg, "the most abstract and intentional city on the entire globe," written with the unforgettable wit and compassion of the master of Russian literature. (RUS230, $12.00)
  Notes from Underground
Odyssey Guide Moscow, St. Petersburg & The Golden Ring  •  Masha Nordbye  •  Patricia Lanza
GUIDEBOOK •  2007 •  PAPER  • 728 PAGES • BEST SELLER
A comprehensive guide to the art, culture and history of these two great Russian cities, filled with maps and fine color photographs. It also includes a 50-page chapter on the ancient cities of the Golden Ring around Moscow. Third edition. (RUS78, $26.95)
  Odyssey Guide Moscow, St. Petersburg & The Golden Ring
The Oligarchs, Wealth & Power in the New Russia  •  David Hoffman
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 567 PAGES
A scrupulously documented, fascinating account of six businessmen whose profiteering amid the near-anarchy and corruption that followed collapse of the Soviet Union skyrocketed them to positions of immense power in the New Russia. Written by the acclaimed former Moscow bureau chief for the Washington Post, it's an engrossing tale of capitalism born from chaos. (RUS159, $21.95)
  The Oligarchs, Wealth & Power in the New Russia
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich  •  Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
LITERATURE •  2009 •  PAPER  • 181 PAGES
The poignant story of an inmate in one of Stalin's Siberian labor camps struggling to maintain his dignity under the oppression of a Communist prison. This is the unexpurgated translation, authorized by Solzhenitsyn after a relaxation of censorship. (RUS26, $14.00)
  One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Pavlovsk, The Life of a Russian Palace  •  Suzanne Massie
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1990 •  PAPER  • 393 PAGES
A biography of the palace from its role in 18th-century Tsarist Russia to the revolution, public park, Nazi military headquarters and restoration. It's a great story, well told by Massie, who also wrote Land of the Firebird. With archival and modern color photographs. Among the books many pleasures is the story the courage of those who fought to save the palace in the wake of WWII. (RUS154, $28.00)
  Pavlovsk, The Life of a Russian Palace
A People's Tragedy, A History of the Russian Revolution  •  Orlando Figes
HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 960 PAGES
An engrossing epic narrative of the Russian Revolution through Lenin's death in 1924. While presenting the full scope of the revolution, Figes does not lose sight of the individual personalities, not only the leaders but also the workers, peasants and soldiers. Figes argues that the revolution was a disaster for the ordinary people of Russia. (RUS181, $27.00)
 
Peter the Great  •  Paul Bushkovitch
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2003 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Focusing on Peter's cooperative relationship with the aristocracy, Yale professor Paul Bushkovitch offers a revised view of the legendary modernizer of Russia. Bushkovitch sees Peter as more of a politician than once thought, while no less a dynamic and powerful personality. (RUS169, $24.95)
 
Peter the Great, His Life and World  •  Robert Massie
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1986 •  PAPER  • 960 PAGES
A Pulitzer Prize-winning, best-selling history of the great Westernizer of Russia. Massie portrays a giant of history on the monumental canvas of Europe as he transforms Russia from backwater tsardom to major empire. In this massive chronicle, he tells of Peter the Great as he travels incognito to the West, builds Russia's navy, defeats Sweden, moves the capital of the country to the newly created St. Petersburg, and modernizes Russia. (RUS11, $8.99)
  Peter the Great, His Life and World
Petersburg  •  David McDuff  •  Andrei Bely
LITERATURE •  2011 •  PAPER  • 624 PAGES
The "New York Times Book Review" calls this novel, written in 1916, the "most important, most influential, and most perfectly realized Russian novel written in the 20th century." Bely conjures a whirlwind of impressions and impulses in this kinetic meditation on the nature of the city. In an unabridged translation that captures the rhythms of the Russian original. (RUS134, $17.00)
  Petersburg
Petersburg, Crucible of Cultural Revolution  •  Katarina Clark
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1998 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
A case study of the cultural changes in St. Petersburg in the years 1913-1931 and how they coincided with the Russian Revolution. The author tries to discern how and why Stalinist culture arose, by looking at a variety of sources (from archived material to films and novels of the time) and offering her own revisionist theories. A focused and detailed analysis for those interested in the intellectual and artistic communities of the period. (RUS43, $30.00)
  Petersburg, Crucible of Cultural Revolution
Pimsleur Quick & Simple Russian  •  Pimsleur Language Method
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2005 •  AUDIO CD
Four audio CDs with eight 30-minute lessons in basic Russian, covering elementary vocabulary and phrases used in travel and everyday situations. The Pimsleur method emphasizes the use of listening skills without reading materials (so there isn't a book to follow along). It's advertised as "Totally audio: hear it, learn it, speak it." (RUS112, $19.95)
  Pimsleur Quick & Simple Russian
Piratization of Russia, Russian Reform Goes Awry  •  Marshall Goldman
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
The distressing tale of the making of oligarchs in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union. Goldman is the Associate Director of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University and the Davis Professor of Russian Economics Emeritus at Wellesley College, and has written widely on contemporary Russian affairs. (RUS211, $49.95)
  Piratization of Russia, Russian Reform Goes Awry
Pocket Menu Reader Russia  •  Langenscheidt  •  Mario Caramitti
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2000 •  PAPER  • 189 PAGES
A pocket guide to negotiating food and restaurants in Russian with an overview of typical foods, 1,500 words and phrases, transliterations and Cyrillic. (RUS165, $7.95)
  Pocket Menu Reader Russia
Poland  •  James Michener
LITERATURE •  1990 •  PAPER  • 616 PAGES
In his epic style, Michener presents the sweep of Polish history from the earliest days to 1983 in this massively researched -- and fascinating -- novel. His focus is on the struggle for freedom. An excellent choice for reading on the airplane! (PLD02, $7.99)
  Poland
The Portable Chekhov  •  Avrahm Yarmolinsky  •  Anton Chekhov
LITERATURE •  1987 •  PAPER  • 634 PAGES
The Viking Portable Library features a good selection of stories and plays, including "The Kiss," "Daydreams," and "The Peasants. " Translated by Avrahm Yarmolinsky. (RUS99, $20.00)
 
Purge  •  Sofi Oksanen
LITERATURE •  2010 •  PAPER  • 400 PAGES
Oksanen sets her powerful first novel, a bestseller in Europe, in Estonia during the Soviet era, weaving the stories of two troubled women brought together by happenstance. (BLT43, $14.95)
  Purge
The Queen of Spades  •  Peter Ilyitch Tchaikovsky
MUSIC •  1999 •  PAPER  • 800 PAGES
The full score of one of Tchaikovsky's most popular operas, his adaptation of Pushkin's short story of the same name. (RUS219, $39.95)
 
Queer in Russia: A Story of Sex, Self, and the Other  •  Laurie Essig
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1999 •  PAPER  • 254 PAGES
An engaging, scholarly portrait of post-perestroika gay culture. The author (who appears in male drag in one of many photographs in the book), interviews many men and women for this insightful study, which also takes into account her own observations, and a close look at contemporary books, plays, and music. Despite Yeltsin's de-crimilization of consensual sex between adults of the same sex in 1993, atitudes and behavios have been slow to change. (RUS146, $23.95)
 
The Ransom of Russian Art  •  John McPhee
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1998 •  PAPER  • 192 PAGES
A fascinating, illustrated account of the underground of Russia during the Cold War. In a break from his series on North American geology, McPhee has chosen to profile Norton Townsend Dodge, a man he originally met on a train, and an unusual collector of dissident Russian art. With his typically compelling style, McPhee writes about a professor who, according to his wife, "couldn't fight his way out of a paper bag," yet managed to smuggle thousands of important works out of Russia. The book includes dozens of color reproductions. (RUS91, $12.00)
  The Ransom of Russian Art
Rasputin, The Saint Who Sinned  •  Brian Moynahan
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  PAPER  • 400 PAGES
A juicy biography of the curious mystic, holy man and influential advisor of the Romanovs. The lurid detail and sensational style make for a fun read. Moynahan's scholarly bent and attention to historical events also make this book a good portrait of pre-Revolutionary Russia. Not surprisingly, the author pays particular attention to Rasputin's relationship with the Tsar and Tsarina. Moynahan is the author of three previous books on Russian history. (RUS198, $17.95)
 
Reading Chekhov, A Critical Journey  •  Janet Malcolm
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 205 PAGES
An extended essay of Chekhov and his work interweaving literary criticism, biography and a journey to St. Petersburg, Moscow and Yalta -- all significant to the plays, stories and life of Chekhov. (RUS155, $13.95)
 
The Red Stuff, The True Story of the Russian Race for Space  •  Leo De Boer
SCIENCE •  1999 •  DVD  • 1 PAGES
The dramatic tale of the early cosmonauts and the Russian Space Program, which in the years between 1957 and 1965 launched the first satellite, sent the living being (a dog) and the first man into space and made the first space walk. DE Boer, a Dutch documentary film maker, intercuts archival material, contemporary shots of Space City and interviews with some of the original cosmonauts. With English subtitles. The DVD includes Starman, the story of Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space. (RUS265, $19.98)
 
The Reforms of Peter the Great, Progress through Coercion in Russia  •  Evgenii Anisimov  •  John Alexander
HISTORY •  1993 •  PAPER  • 344 PAGES
Russian historian Evgenii Anisimov writes of Peter the Great, and how his various reforms shaped early 18th-century Russia. (RUS102, $34.95)
 
Resurrection, The Struggle for a New Russia  •  David Remnick
HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 352 PAGES
Remnick, the Washington Post reporter who won the Pulitzer Prize for Lenin's Tomb (on the fall of the Soviet Union), insightfully explores the powers shaping a new Russia. Remnick focuses on the emergence of a new power elite, but does not neglect the effect of these changes on the welfare of the Russian people. Chronologically, the book follows the ruins of the USSR, up to the 1996 elections. (RUS23, $16.00)
  Resurrection, The Struggle for a New Russia
The Rise of Russia and the Fall of the Soviet Empire  •  John Dunlop
HISTORY •  1995 •  PAPER  • 394 PAGES
A modern scholarly history of Russia from Perestroika to the abortive coup of August 1991 and dissolution of the Soviet Union. Dunlop, a fellow at the Hoover Institution, explores Yeltsin's role in resisting Communist resurgence and questions whether new institutions will survive the challenges of democracy in a traditionally undemocratic society. (RUS68, $46.95)
 
The Romanovs, The Final Chapter  •  Robert Massie
HISTORY •  1995 •  PAPER  • 308 PAGES
Written like a good detective story, this riveting scientific thriller examines the evidence and international dispute linking the skeletons exhumed in 1991 in Siberia with the last of the Romanovs killed in the early period of the Russian Revolution. Are these the remains of the last tsar and his family, and was Anna Anderson really the Grand Duchess Anastasia as she claimed? This book provides definitive answers to one of the most enduring and intriguing mysteries of the 20th century. (RUS14, $16.00)
 
Rough Guide Copenhagen  •  Lone Mouritsen  •  Andrew Spooner
GUIDEBOOK •  2010 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
A pocket guide to Copenhagen. Includes history, culture and visitor attractions. With full color maps. Organized geographically, this handy guide includes a separate section with recommended hotels, shops, restaurants, cafes and bars. (DMK15, $19.99)
  Rough Guide Copenhagen
Rough Guide Moscow  •  Rough Guide
GUIDEBOOK •  2009 •  PAPER  • 524 PAGES
A comprehensive, no-nonsense guide to the culture, history and attractions of Moscow. With fll colcor maps of Central Moscow and the Metro system, dozens of sketch maps and site diagrams, and a chapter on excursions outside of Moscow. (RUS129, $18.99)
  Rough Guide Moscow
Rough Guide The Baltic States: Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania  •  Rough Guide
GUIDEBOOK •  2008 •  PAPER  • 504 PAGES
This comprehensive travel guide to the Baltic States includes region-by-region descriptions of attractions and a good overview of history and culture. (BLT17, $21.99)
  Rough Guide The Baltic States: Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania
The Routledge Atlas of Russian History  •  Martin Gilbert
HISTORY •  2007 •  PAPER  • 216 PAGES
A fantastically interesting, useful survey of the history of Russia in 161 maps, covering rebellion and exile, famine, expansion, trade, the military, the collapse of communism and myriad other topics, all succinctly presented. This revised edition follows the fate of Russia since the demise of the Soviet Union. Each black-and-white map is densely printed with factual information and accompanies by a detailed key and a few paragraphs of text. (RUS176, $29.95)
  The Routledge Atlas of Russian History
Russia and the Russians, A History  •  Geoffrey Hosking
HISTORY •  2011 •  PAPER  • 752 PAGES
This ambitious history, the latest by a leading British University scholar, tackles with clarity the scope and breadth of the Russian empire from its Kievan beginnings through Imperial expansion, revolution and the Soviet period all the way to the 21st century. Hosking takes as his focus the Russian character, paying special attention to non-Russian ethnic groups scattered across Eurasia. (RUS208, $25.95)
  Russia and the Russians, A History
Russia from St. Petersburg to Moscow Map  •  Falk Maps
2009 •  MAP
A detailed map of northwest Russia at a scale of 1:750,000, well-suited for a river cruise between St. Petersburg and Moscow. It covers all but the northernmost extent of the route. A multi-lingual map, place names are in Russian. It does, however, omit the northernmost part of the trip (three days) from Goritsy to Svir Story. It does not show the White Lake, the Volga-Baltic Waterway, Lake Onega, Svir River and portions of Lake Lagoda. Published mostly in German. One Side. 38 X 55 inches. (RUS06, $17.95)
  Russia from St. Petersburg to Moscow Map
The Russia Hand, a Memoir of Presidential Diplomacy  •  Strobe Talbott
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 478 PAGES
An insider's view of the Clinton administration's role in Russia's transition from communism to democracy. Strobe Talbott was President Clinton's top advisor on Russia policy, and he gives intimate details on not only diplomatic issues, but also the characters involved, not least Boris Yeltsin and Clinton himself. (RUS234, $16.95)
 
The Russia House  •  John Le Carre
LITERATURE •  2000 •  PAPER  • 434 PAGES
The spymaster sets his sights on post-glasnost Russia in this suspenseful novel of love and espionage delivered with traditional Le Carrean panache. The backdrop of Gorbachev's restructuring paints a portrait of life in Moscow for Easterners and Westerners alike in the final decade of the Soviet Union. (RUS186, $16.00)
 
Russia in Search of Itself  •  James H. Billington
HISTORY •  2004 •  HARD COVER  • 256 PAGES
A wise and probing analysis of modern Russia by the Librarian of Congress and expert on Russia James Billington. Copublished by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. (RUS229, $26.95)
  Russia in Search of Itself
Russia in Search of Itself  •  James H. Billington
HISTORY •  2004 •  HARD COVER  • 256 PAGES
A wise and probing analysis of modern Russia by the Librarian of Congress and expert on Russia James Billington. Copublished by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. (RUS229, $26.95)
  Russia in Search of Itself
Russia in Space, The Failed Frontier?  •  Brian Harvey
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 416 PAGES
In this wide-ranging guide to the Russian space program, Harvey takes readers from the program's conception in 1921, through its golden age, near ruin with the collapse of the Soviet Union, and tentative steps into the 21st century. He considers especially Russia's leading role in the International Space Station. (RUS182, $49.95)
 
Russia in the Age of Peter the Great  •  Lindsey Hughes
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  PAPER  • 640 PAGES
A biography of Peter the Great and an account of Russia in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Comprehensive, readable and impeccably researched, the strength of this book is in how it illuminates both Peter's life and his time. (RUS103, $90.00)
 
Russia Map  •  International Travel Maps
2011 •  MAP
This double-sided map at a scale of 1:6,000,000 shows Russia and the former republics of the Soviet Union as far as the Yenisey river on one side with the remainder of Eastern Russia on the reverse. With relief shading, roads and railways. Place names are Romanized (no Cyrillic). Two Sides. 38x31 inches. (RUS264, $12.95)
  Russia Map
Russia's Heritage Cities  •  International Travel Maps
2002 •  MAP
A nicely detailed map for travelers of the cities of the Golden Ring at a scale of 1:500,000. The double-side maps shows the historic region northeast of Moscow on one side, with city plans of Sergiev Posad, Rostov, Yaroslavl, Uglich, Vladimir, Suzdal, Kostroma and Pereslavl-Zalessky on the reverse. Two Sides. 23x35 inches. (RUS217, $8.95)
  Russia's Heritage Cities
Russia's Unfinished Revolution, Political Change from Gorbachev to Putin  •  Michael McFaul
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 383 PAGES
A political history and analysis of Russian democracy and institutions since the Gorbechev era, especially strong on Yeltsin. The author, a senior associate at Carnegie, teaches political science at Stanford. (RUS160, $23.95)
 
Russia, A Concise History  •  Ronald Hingley
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES • BEST SELLER
A very readable, condensed history of Russia's multiple transformations from her illiterate, pagan, Slavic roots to a multi-ethnic empire. Well-known scholar Ronald Hingley summarizes the tragic history of Russia from the invasions of the Tartars, Napoleon and Germans to the collapse of the Soviet Union. He doesn't shy from the abuses of power by autocratic tsars and the totalitarian Communist regime. With 205 well-integrated illustrations and four maps. (RUS04, $19.95)
  Russia, A Concise History
Russia, A History  •  Gregory Freeze
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 496 PAGES
An illustrated survey of the full scope of Russian political history with 13 engaging essays by leading specialists; the modern era is given equal weight alongside the medieval and imperial periods. With 16 color plates and 180 illustrations. Second Edition. Gregory Freeze is a professor of history at Brandeis and research associate of the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard University. (RUS40, $29.95)
  Russia, A History
Russia, Experiment With a People  •  Robert Service
HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 406 PAGES
An authoritative survey of the transformation of Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union, organized thematically. Service casts a wide net, looking at not just political and economic change but also the influence of society, culture and belief. (RUS284, $23.50)
  Russia, Experiment With a People
Russia, People and Empire, 1552-1917  •  Geoffrey Hosking
HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 548 PAGES
Historian Geoffrey Hosking writes elegently and vehemently on the history of Russia under the czars. Hosking argues that Imperial Russia pursued empire building at the expense of national identity. (RUS29, $26.50)
  Russia, People and Empire, 1552-1917
Russian Experiment in Art, 1863-1922  •  Camilla Gray  •  Marian Burleigh-Motley
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1998 •  PAPER  • 324 PAGES
A handsome illustrated volume in the "World of Art" series, this book documents a critical period in the history of Russian art in a series of insightful essays and hundreds of color illustrations. Organized chronologically, it's an excellent guide to the extraordinary art of Kasimir Malevich, Alexander Rodchenko, and other masters of the Russian avant-garde. Completely revised for this edition. (RUS17, $19.95)
  Russian Experiment in Art, 1863-1922
Russian Folk Art  •  Alison Hilton
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1995 •  HARD COVER  • 356 PAGES
An illustrated study of Russian folk art from traditional forms to modern interpretations. (RUS104, $27.95)
  Russian Folk Art
A Russian Journal  •  John Steinbeck  •  Robert Capa
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1999 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
During the Cold War, amidst an abundance of paranoia, Steinbeck and Capa decided to gather un-propagandized information on the Russian way of life by traveling to the other side of the Iron Curtain. This is the result of their reporting project, an honest account of the people and everyday life, with striking photographs by the great Robert Capa. (RUS275, $15.00)
  A Russian Journal
The Russian Museum, A Centennial Celebration of a National Treasure  •  Vladimir Gusyev  •  Yevgenia Petrova
ART & ARCHITECTURE •  1998 •  HARD COVER  • 286 PAGES
An overview of Russian art from 989 to present, highlighting the collection of The Russian Museum. Includes many unfamiliar works largely unknown outside of Russia. An informative text accompanies 295 color plates. (RUS199, $60.00)
 
Russian Phrasebook & Dictionary  •  Hippocrene
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  1994 •  PAPER  • 228 PAGES
A handy phrasebook and basic dictionary featuring transliterations of all the Russian words. (RUS65, $11.95)
 
The Russian Revolution  •  Sheila Fitzpatrick
HISTORY •  1994 •  PAPER  • 199 PAGES
A concise provocative summary of events in Russia between 1917 and 1939, appropriate for the curious general reader and student alike. Fitzpatrick makes an admirable effort to rescue from politics the greatest upheaval of modern times and reclaim it for history. (RUS39, $14.95)
 
Russian, Start Speaking Today!  •  Language/30
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  1995 •  AUDIO CD
A 90-minute crash course with a CD and phrasebook, all packaged in a vinyl sleeve. Geared for travelers, the course follows the foreign service method -- which focuses on dialogues and useful sentences instead of individual words. In each case, an English phrase is spoken once, and repeated twice in Russian. Topics include introductions, transportation, business and health. Na zdorovye! (RUS192, $24.95)
  Russian, Start Speaking Today!
The Sexual Revolution in Russia, From the Age of the Czars to Today  •  Igor Kon
HISTORY •  1995 •  HARD COVER  • 337 PAGES
A groundbreaking, fascinating history of sex, sexuality and attitudes in Russia from Tsarist times through the communist period -- and the accompanying repression of the sexual lives of the Russians -- to the post-perestroika transformation. The author, a historian in Russia and its first "sexologist," draws on history, folklore, literature and sociological data derived from the author's surveys and interviews. (RUS147, $25.50)
 
Shostakovich, A Life Remembered  •  Elizabeth Wilson
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2006 •  PAPER  • 600 PAGES
An engaging biography of the composer Dmitri Shostakovich, drawing heavily on the accounts of his contemporaries. (RUS94, $30.95)
 
Sleeping Beauty, A Legend in Progress  •  Tim Scholl
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2004 •  HARD COVER  • 272 PAGES
A history of Sleeping Beauty in the context of 20th century Russian Ballet -- and the surprisingly controversial response to a 1999 production. (RUS253, $40.00)
 
Smilla's Sense of Snow  •  Peter Hoeg
LITERATURE •  2012 •  PAPER  • 448 PAGES
Set in Denmark and Greenland and aboard a secret ship, this page-turner (made into a terrible movie) includes an excellent portrait of modern day Copenhagen in its first half. Twentieth Anniversary Edition. (DMK03, $17.00)
  Smilla's Sense of Snow
Soviet Blitzkrieg, The Battle for White Russia, 1944  •  Walter S. Dunn
HISTORY •  2008 •  PAPER  • 252 PAGES
A history of the Russian campaign to regain control of Belarus from the invading Germans. A monumental battle staged in 1944, the details of events have finally come to light thanks to the release of previously classified military documents. (RUS121, $16.95)
 
Speak, Memory  •  Vladimir Nabokov
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1989 •  PAPER  • 316 PAGES
A richly imagined memoir of Nabokov's early years. First published in 1951, it wonderfully evokes cultural life among the well-to-do in turn-of-the-century St. Petersburg. The prose is so rich and the presentation so well considered, few novels can rival this nonfiction classic in imagination and detail. (RUS28, $16.00)
  Speak, Memory
St. Petersburg Map  •  Borch Maps
MAP
A detailed, laminated city plan of St. Petersburg at a scale of 1:11,000, with street index inset. Place names are in transliterated English. Two Sides. 20x26 inches. (RUS89, $7.95)
  St. Petersburg Map
St. Petersburg, A Cultural History  •  Solomon Volkov  •  Antonina Bouis
HISTORY •  1995 •  PAPER  • 598 PAGES
This intimate cultural history of the city includes profiles of its artists and writers over the last 300 years. The author is a native historian and musician who knew such luminaries as Balanchine and Brodsky. (RUS72, $38.95)
  St. Petersburg, A Cultural History
Stalin, Breaker of Nations  •  Robert Conquest
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1992 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
A well known biography by Robert Conquest. (RUS249, $17.00)
 
Stalin, The Court of the Red Tsar  •  Simon Sebag Montefiore
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2005 •  PAPER  • 848 PAGES
An exhaustively researched "man-behind-the-monster" look at Joseph Stalin and his court. At 800 pages, there is ample room for personal and anecdotal information about Stalin -- down to his musical preferences -- as well as the gory details of the vicious politics and sexual quirks of the cast of characters that made up Stalin's political family. The lengthy volume includes new archival material, interviews with surviving figures of the era, and 24 pages of maps and photos. Montefiore has also written a biography of Prince Grigory Potemkin. (RUS228, $19.95)
  Stalin, The Court of the Red Tsar
Stalingrad, The Fateful Siege, 1942-1943  •  Antony Beevor
HISTORY •  1999 •  PAPER  • 491 PAGES
With the benefit of Russian documents never before seen by Western scholars, German transcripts, and private letters and diaries, Beevor recasts the battle of Stalingrad, which broke the back of the Nazi army during the Second World War, in new and riveting detail. (RUS297, $18.00)
  Stalingrad, The Fateful Siege, 1942-1943
Stockholm, A Cultural History  •  Tony Griffiths
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2009 •  PAPER  • 256 PAGES
A literary, cultural guide to the art, architecture, traditions and history of Stockholm. (SWE57, $16.95)
 
A Summer on the Yenesei, 1914  •  Maud D. Haviland
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1971 •  HARD COVER  • 328 PAGES
The charming account of an amateur British ornithologist on an expedition down the Yenesei to the Kara Sea in 1914. Though certainly dated (the shooting of birds for collection is done with great relish), the description of life on the Yenesei is veery well done. In addiiton to her impressions of nature and birds, Haviland records her encounters with Siberiak villagers and Samoyed people near the Gulf. (SIB08, $23.95)
 
Tales of Belkin and Other Prose Writings  •  Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin
LITERATURE •  1998 •  PAPER  • 198 PAGES
This sampling of Pushkin's short stories includes his autobiographical "A Journey to Arzrum," the tale of travels from Moscow across the Caucasus and Georgia to Turkey during the war of 1829. Translated by Ronald Wilks with an introduction by John Bayley. (RUS232, $13.00)
 
Tallinn Map  •  ITMB
2006 •  MAP
A city map of historic Tallinn at a walking scale of 1:8,000. Two Sides. 37 X 49 inches. (BLT23, $11.95)
  Tallinn Map
The Taste of Dreams, An Obsession with Russia and Caviar  •  Vanora Bennett
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 276 PAGES
In this informative, entertaining book, former Moscow correspondent Vanora Bennett explores the strange and powerful allure of the celebrated Russian delicacy. Bennett provides a detailed portrait of the history of caviar while coming to her own stirring realizations about the realities of modern Russia. (RUS226, $14.95)
 
Teach Yourself Beginner's Russian Script  •  Daphne West
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2003 •  PAPER  • 119 PAGES
A step-by-step guide to reading and writing Cyrillic, organized into ten brief units. The book divides the alphabet in manageable chunks, covering 5012 letters, review, decorative handwritten script and vocabulary. (RUS207, $10.95)
 
Teach Yourself Beginner's Russian, An Easy Introduction  •  Rachel Farmer
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  1997 •  CASETTE TAPE  • 240 PAGES
This comprehensive guide to the basics of spoken Russian includes a book and two audio cassettes, all packaged in a plastic case. You may also purchase the book separately (RUS124). (RUS110, $22.95)
 
Ten Days That Shook the World  •  John Reed
HISTORY •  2007 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
An eyewitness account of the greatest revolution of the 20th century. This political classic captures the spirit of those heady days of excitement and idealism before disillusion and cynicism set in. Reed, an American journalist, became a hero of the revolution himself and was buried under the Kremlin wall. (RUS13, $13.00)
  Ten Days That Shook the World
Tevye the Dairyman and the Railroad Stories  •  Sholem Aleichem
LITERATURE •  1996 •  PAPER
A winning collection of Yiddish tales (including, famously, the source material for Fiddler on the Roof) as translated by Hillel Halkin. (RUS170, $16.95)
 
Thomas Cook Travellers Moscow & St Petersburg  •  Chris Booth
GUIDEBOOK •  2006 •  PAPER  • 192 PAGES
A compact, easy-to-use guide to Moscow and St. Petersburg with maps, a synopsis of favorite sites and many photographs. (RUS293, $14.95)
 
The Tin Drum  •  Gunter Grass
LITERATURE •  2010 •  PAPER  • 582 PAGES
Probably the best German novel written since the end of World War II, this is the surreal story of a mute dwarf named Oskar who lives through Nazi Germany and finds himself in a mental institution. Nobel Prize winner Gunter Grass provides a profound and hilarious perspective on both German history and the human condition in the modern world. (GER33, $15.95)
  The Tin Drum
To Begin Where I Am, The Selected Prose of Czeslaw Milosz  •  Czeslaw Milosz  •  Madeline G. Levine  •  Bogdana Carpenter
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
Culled from a lifetime's worth of publications, these essays by the Lithuanian-born Polish poet and Nobel laureate Milosz address the Polish experience at home and abroad in the 20th century. There couldn't be a better national spokesperson than this brilliant writer, who has taught Slavic Languages and Literature at UC Berkeley since the 1950s. As a sample of Milosz's prose, these selections cover everything from Polish poetry to modern philosophy to personal memoirs of life in Wilno, Warsaw, Paris and California. (PLD25, $17.00)
  To Begin Where I Am, The Selected Prose of Czeslaw Milosz
To the Finland Station  •  Edmond Wilson
HISTORY •  2003 •  PAPER  • 507 PAGES
This wide-ranging, heartfelt tribute to the power of history takes, as its ostensible subject, the origins of the Russian revolution. Originally published in 1940, Wilson famously shows his enthusiasm for the great Soviet experiment and, especially, Lenin. It's a fascinating book which ranges from the French revolution, Engels and Marx, to Lenin and Trotsky (who Wilson disliked). (RUS206, $19.95)
 
To the Hermitage  •  Malcolm Bradbury
LITERATURE •  2002 •  PAPER  • 510 PAGES • COMING IN
Bradbury's last novel -- a spirited, complex tale involving French philosopher Diderot, Catherine the Great, an English professor, 18th-century notions and contemporary politics. Bradbury alternates chapters set during the reign of Catherine the Great and 1990s St. Petersburg. It's a novel of ideas -- and an excellent portrait of Russia. (RUS153, $16.95)
  To the Hermitage
Tragedy of Russia's Reforms, Market Bolshevism Against Democracy  •  Peter Reddaway  •  Dmitri Glinsky
HISTORY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 768 PAGES
A provocative, comprehensive analysis of economic modernization (or lack thereof) in today's Russia, especially critical of the policies of Yeltsin. (RUS162, $29.95)
 
Transitional Citizens, Voters and What Influences Them in the New Russia  •  Timothy J. Colton
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 320 PAGES
A scholarly, sophisticated account of Russian citizens and the vote since the collapse of the Soviet Union. With charts, graphs and extensive notes. (RUS158, $39.00)
 
A Traveller's History of Russia  •  Peter Neville
HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 336 PAGES
An impressively compact, lively survey of Russian history from the coming of the Slavs to the collapse of the Soviet Union. (RUS47, $14.95)
  A Traveller's History of Russia
Tsar, The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra  •  Peter Kurth  •  Peter Christopher  •  Edvard Radzinsky
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1998 •  PAPER  • 230 PAGES
A tribute to the last of the Romanovs, featuring a treasure trove of never-published photographs and illuminating text. It brings to life in sumptuous detail the tumultuous life and times of Nicholas and Alexandra. Masterful. (RUS79, $29.99)
  Tsar, The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra
The Turkish Gambit  •  Andrew Bromfield  •  Boris Akunin
MYSTERY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Detective Erast Fandorin is caught in Bulgaria in the middle of the brutal Russo-Turkish war in this thriller set in 1877. Boris Akunin's Erast Fandorin series have sold ten million copies in Russia alone. This is the third book to be translated into English. (RUS263, $14.00)
  The Turkish Gambit
Valse des Fleurs, A Day in St Petersburg in 1868  •  Sacheverell Sitwell
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  PAPER  • 151 PAGES
"There will be a ball in the Winter Palace tonight!" So begins this extended meditation on court life by Sitwell (1897-1988), the poet, critic -- and brother of Edith. Sitwell composed this celebration of the city as Leningrad was under siege in 1941. In this extended essay Sitwell conjures snow and gilt, courtiers, music and pageantry, a military parade, sledges, sables, and Cossacks during the reign of Alexander II. (RUS209, $29.95)
 
War and Peace  •  Leo Tolstoy  •  Constance Garnett
LITERATURE •  1983 •  PAPER  • 1344 PAGES
This great historical and philosophical novel set in the age of Napoleon portrays Russia through the lives of three aristocratic families united by love and separated by war during the invasion. As the men learn about courage, character and death through the initiation of war, a young woman learns about her feelings, emotions and passions as she is initiated into love. (RUS20, $10.95)
 
We Now Know, Rethinking Cold War History  •  John Lewis Gaddis
HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 425 PAGES
The eminent Cold War scholar, John Lewis Gaddis, takes advantage of the opening of Soviet archives to re-examine the tension between the U.S. and U.S.S.R through the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. (RUS191, $24.99)
 
Wine Country Europe, Touring, Tasting, And Buying At European Regional Wineries  •  Ornella D'Alessio  •  Marco Santini
FOOD •  2005 •  HARD COVER  • 324 PAGES
Part how-to, part guidebook, part picture book, this charming coffee table treat covers sprawling French vineyards as well as lesser-known hidden treasures in Austria and Hungary. The authors, both Italian journalists and wine connoisseurs, provide helpful tips alongside the hundreds of magnificent color photographs. (EUR191, $35.00)
  Wine Country Europe, Touring, Tasting, And Buying At European Regional Wineries
The Winter War: The Soviet Attack on Finland, 1939-1940  •  Eloise Engle  •  Lauri Paananen
HISTORY •  1992 •  PAPER  • 176 PAGES
The story of the 105-day campaign against Finland in the early days of WWII. This book displays how the Finns, though vastly outnumbered, showed great ingenuity in the field of battle. The authors draw on both archival research and interviews to tell their story. With maps and a section of photographs. Originally published in 1973. (SCN20, $19.95)
  The Winter War: The Soviet Attack on Finland, 1939-1940
With the Armies of the Tsar, A Nurse at the Russian Front in War and Revolution, 1914-1918  •  Frances Farmborough
HISTORY •  2000 •  PAPER  • 422 PAGES
An extraordinary memoir of life on the battlefield by an English governess in Moscow who volunteered her services as a nurse in WWI. A witness to the 1917 revolution, she accompanied Russia's troops in Poland, Austria and Rumania, finally fleeing to Vladivostok from where she escaped home to Britain. With 50 of Farmborough's photographs. (RUS139, $19.95)
 
A Woman in Amber  •  Agate Nesaule
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1997 •  PAPER  • 280 PAGES
The author, who fled rural Latvia on the heels of the Russian advance at the age of seven, chronicles the terrible dislocations of World War II. In this American Book Award-winning memoir, she tells the powerful story of what she witnessed and experienced as a young girl during the war. Ultimately a testimony to survival, this book brings to light a terrible knowledge of rape, torture and execution. (RUS30, $16.00)
  A Woman in Amber
Women of the Four Winds  •  Elizabeth Olds
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1999 •  PAPER  • 336 PAGES
Former president of the Society of Women Geographers, journalist Olds rescues four extraordinary 20th-century American women from obscurity in this collection of four short, lively biographies. All showed remarkable courage and perseverance. She includes Annie Smith Peck, a climber who was the first American and first woman to summit Huascaran in Peru (at age 60); Delia Akeley, an African explorer and big game hunter who more than kept up with her famous husband; Marguerite Harrison, an American spy in Lubianka prison in Soviet Russia; and Louise Arner Boyd who capped a lifetime of Arctic exploration with a flight over the North Pole at age 67. Originally published in 1985. (EXP19, $21.95)
  Women of the Four Winds

 
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