Book review: Vernacular voices in story of Soviet Union’s implosion

Author weaves lives of die-hard apparatchiks with the dreams of young Russian musicians more inspired by Dylan than Dostoevsky, more moved by Lennon than Lenin
Book review: Vernacular voices in story of Soviet Union’s implosion

Mikhail Gorbachev, pictured in 1990, is portrayed not as the avuncular uncle the West cheered but as a petty, volatile, and ineffective leader with a haughty wife. File picture: AP/David Longstreath

  • The Darkside of the Earth: How the Soviet Union Collapsed but Remained
  • Mikhail Zygar
  • Weidenfeld & Nicolson

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