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Loading... Kinderen van Stalin (original 2008; edition 2008)by Owen Matthews
Work detailsStalin's Children: Three Generations of Love, War, and Survival by Owen Matthews (2008)
None. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.I found the story of his parents to be compelling and heart-wrenching, even though I knew generally how it would end (the author was born, after all), and the story of his grandparents and early life his mother and aunt under Stalin to be equally interesting, but the interjections of the author's own life and experiences in Moscow were too disjointed and random to be interesting. I believe the intention was to draw parallels between his experiences in Moscow in the 90's with that of his parents, but they lacked the narrative quality of the rest of the arc and I found them to be distracting. However, these stories amount to less than ten percent of the book, so they do not detract too much from the rest of the book. This is not a book that will teach you about the global politics and high level machinations of the Soviet system through the twentieth century, but if one is already familiar with the geopolitics of the time, it will give you insight into how those politics effected the personal lives of the people living in Moscow during that time. All in all a very compelling read. Owen Matthews's book is a history of Russia from the 1930s on, as shown through three generations of his family. The title, I think, is somewhat misleading. His grandfather, a loyal-Party worker was swept up in Stalin's purges, never to be seen again. His story and that of his wife and two daughters was fascinating reading. But when the story moved forward to daughter Mila's romance with Mervyn Matthews (Owen's parents), I found their story of fighting bureaucracy in the 1960s much less interesting. The third generation, represented by Owen Matthews, himself, in Russia in the 1990s, struck me as even less interesting. I've decided to read further about Stalin and Russia's role in World War II, topics that, based on this book, I think will be of much more interest to me. "Stalin's Children" has a good selection of photos of many of the people involved. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Tre generasjoner i krig og kjærlighet 1900-tallet er historie, og det blir produsert mange bøker som tar utgangspunkt i det 20. århundret. Ei av disse er "Barn av Stalin". Owen Matthews er født på begynnelsen av 1970-tallet, men rakk å utrette mye før vi gikk over i et nytt århundre. Han har jobbet som journalist og er i dag leder for magasinet Newsweeks kontor i Moskva. I boka "Barn av Stalin" presenterer han 1900-tallets Sovjetunionen, den kalde krigen og de elleville 1990-årene i Moskva ved å fortelle historiene om sine besteforeldre, foreldre og om sitt eget liv. Call it irrationality, call it Russian maximalism, but the letters, papers and confidences Matthews inhabits in “Stalin’s Children” rehabilitate all the generations they touch — including his own — showing how their times shaped their choices. Owen Matthews has an extraordinary story to tell, spanning three generations of his own family, all caught up with the cataclysmic events of Russia in the 20th century.
References to this work on external resources.
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Matthews ties in his own experience as a young man in post-Cold War Russia. The book doesn't have a really tight structure, but it works wonderfully. It's captivating, and is a love letter of sorts to the author's parents, and the country and people who are inextricably linked to his family's history.