A Tear in the Curtain
by John Symons
Description
The author is a fluent Russian speaker so has had access to material only available in Russian. The book is a timely reminder of the recent but half-forgotten period in which the story is set, the Cold War.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 some Russians sought to come to terms with the countless crimes perpetrated by the Communist Party at home and abroad. There was a brief attempt, under President Yeltsin, to reveal the truth, later thwarted by the recrudescence of Communists and then Putin’s leadership. There is now a determined official campaign to minimise or deny the truth about the millions who lost their lives.
The book is, in part, based on the author’s talks with people persecuted or imprisoned by the Gestapo or KGB, and on information revealed in documents, many of them not yet available in English, made public in Russia after 1991.
Some of the documents are from the huge collection made available, at President Yeltsin’s direction, in 1992 to Vladimir Bukovsky, the Soviet dissident expelled from his home country in December 1976 who settled in Britain.
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Reviews
‘This is a gem of a book ... compellingly well-written, so absorbing it can be read at a sitting. Re-reading yields more each time, like the best music ... spare, beautiful prose - all the more moving for its under-stated elegance and all the more gripping for its striking use of Hemingway-like short sentence and punchy dialogue ... His technique of using three families across generations allows full scope to the author’s immense emotional and intellectual range. Its approach and theme are worthy of comparison with Jung Chang’s ‘Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China’ ... he has written what deserves to become a classic of its kind.’ Giles Mercer in the Catholic Times'This is the history of Russia, but in a form that you will not have read it before. It is at the same time objective and intensely personal. It tells us more in a few pages than many more formal accounts manage in a whole volume ... Academic writers just do not seem to achieve this perspective ... A short review cannot ... reveal the riches of this novel: easy reading, full of insight, inspiring, and leaving one with the conviction that Russia's renewed betrayal of its moral values can be only a passing phase.' Michael Bourdeaux, founder of Keston Institute, Oxford in the Church Times
Bibliographic Information
- ISBN/Identifier 9780856832925
- FormatHardback
- Primary Price £ 9.95
- Publish StatusPublished
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