The unrivalled, definitive history beautifully reissued with a new introduction for the 100th anniversary
Orlando Figes is Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London. Born in London in 1959, he was previously a Lecturer in History and Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. A People's Tragedy received the Wolfson Prize, the NCR Book Award, the W.H. Smith Literary Award, the Longman/History Today Book Prize and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. He is the author of many other books on Russian history including Natasha's Dance- A Cultural History of Russia, The Whisperers- Private life in Stalin's Russia, Crimea- the Last Crusade and Just Send Me Word- A True Story of Love and Survival in the Gulag.
A modern masterpiece
*Andrew Marr*
Combines dramatic power, absorbing narrative and magisterial
scholarship – a magnificent tour de force
*Sunday Telegraph*
The most moving account of the Russian Revolution since Doctor
Zhivago
*Independent*
This book is not just a history; it is an item of history
*Independent on Sunday*
A People’s Tragedy will do more to help us understand the Russian
Revolution than any other book I know
*London Review of Books*
Orlando Figes’s chronicle of the final days of Tsarism and the
violent Bolshevism that arose from its ruins is an epic in size,
scope and insight, and a classic in its genre… A People’s Tragedy
succeeds most in capturing the sheer popular immensity of the
upheavals in 1917-18, with all of Russia rising up first against
the Tsar and then, with the onset of civil war, against itself.
With its perfect balance of analysis and anecdote, A People’s
Tragedy is surely among the most readable books on the Russian
Revolution and the decades of tumult that made it possible – or
inevitable
*Independent*
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