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Moscow: A Traveller's Reader

Laurence Kelly

5 Reviews

Rated 0

Russia, Prose: non-fiction, Travel writing

A fascinating and wide-ranging anthology, vividly evoking the life of the city in the voices of both visitors and residents through the centuries

Founded in 1147, Moscow was for much of its early history in thrall to other nations - to the Khans, the Tartars and the Poles. The city was devastated by fire time and again, but with each rebuilding, it grew ever more magnificent. For every church that was destroyed, it seemed that two more were built.

In this evocative and fascinating anthology, Moscow's turbulent growth is recorded through the voices of visitors and residents: Peter the Great's bloody reprisals after the revolt of the streltsy in 1698; a visit to the city's brothels by medical students in the 1890s; Kutuzov abandoning Moscow to Napoleon in 1812, and Napoleon's ignominious retreat from the burning city; Pushkin railing against the mindlessness of 1830 society; the flowering of literary greatness in the nineteenth century and of the Moscow Art Theatre in the twentieth; and the dazzling profusion of jewels in the Treasury of the Kremlin.

These and many other milestones in over seven hundred years of history are brought vividly to life.

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Praise for Moscow: A Traveller's Reader

  • Not only essential for all prospective visitors . . . but also entertaining and instructive reading for the armchair traveller. - Observer

  • Could scarcely be bettered - Sunday Telegraph

  • Indispensable - Guardian

  • [Kelly] has in effect invented a new genre, raising compilation almost to the level of art - Observer

  • [Kelly] has ranged widely and chosen widely - Daily Telegraph

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