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The Forbidden Garden: A True Story of Science and Sacrifice in Besieged Leningrad

Simon Parkin

11 Reviews

Rated 0

Former Soviet Union, USSR (Europe), Second World War, Trees, wildflowers & plants

From the winner of the Wingate Literary Prize, a gripping untold story of the world's most valuable library of plants, the siege of Leningrad and a terrible choice

From the winner of the 2023 Wingate Literary Prize comes a fascinating and moving untold story of the Leningrad scientists who risked everything for the future of humanity

In the summer of 1941, German troops surrounded the Russian city of Leningrad - now St Petersburg - and began the longest blockade in recorded history. By the most conservative estimates, the siege would claim the lives of three-quarters of a million people. Most died of starvation.

At the centre of the embattled city stood a converted palace that housed the greatest living plant library ever amassed - the world's first seed bank. After attempts to evacuate the collection failed, and as supplies dwindled, the scientists responsible faced a terrible decision: should they distribute the specimens to the starving population, or preserve them in the hope that they held the key to ending global famine?

Drawing on previously unseen sources, The Forbidden Garden tells the remarkable and moving story of the botanists who remained at the Plant Institute during the darkest days of the siege, risking their lives in the name of science.

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Praise for The Forbidden Garden: A True Story of Science and Sacrifice in Besieged Leningrad

  • SPECTATOR

  • GUARDIAN

  • 'Riveting'

  • 'Vivid and moving'

  • 'Exhilarating'

  • PRAISE FOR THE ISLAND OF EXTRAORDINARY CAPTIVES

  • DAILY MIRROR

  • 'Excellent . . . a powerful tribute'

  • 'Eye-opening, insightful and brilliantly written'

  • MAX HASTINGS

  • NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW

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Simon Parkin

Simon Parkin is an award-winning British writer and journalist. He is a contributing writer for the New Yorker and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society (RHS), and is the author of A Game of Birds and Wolves and The Island of Extraordinary Captives, which was a New Yorker Book of the Year and won the Wingate Literary Prize. He lives in West Sussex.

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