The Spirit-Wrestlers
by Philip Marsden
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The new book from the acclaimed author of The Crossing Place and The Bronski House. In Moscow, a man points on a map to the place where he was born. He is a Doukhobor, a 'spirit-wrestler', a member of a group of radical Russian sectarians. He is pointing to a village beyond the southern steppe, at the far south of the old Russian empire: 'I was born here,' he says. 'On the edge of the world.'So begins Philip Marsden's Russian journey - perhaps the most penetrating account of Russian life show more since the Soviet Union's collapse made travel possible again. In villages unseen by outsiders since before the revolution, he encounters men and women of fabulous courage, larger than life, dazed by the century's turbulence. By turns wise, devout, comic, they seem to have stepped straight from the pages of Turgenev, Gogol and Babel. Marsden meets such figures as the Yezidi Sheikh of Sheikhs, an exiled Georgian prince and a cast of passionate scholars, stooping survivors of the gulags, strutting Cossacks and extreme, isolated sects of Milk-Drinkers and Spirit-Wrestlers.The Spirit-Wrestlers peels away the grey facade of post-Soviet Russia and reveals a people as committed as ever to answering that great Tolstoyan question: how a man should live. Even more than in The Bronski House and The Crossing Place, Philip Marsden shows that behind the horrors of the Soviet years the human spirit remained triumphant. In so doing, he shows himself to be one of the most exciting and original travel writers of his generation. show lessTags
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The Spirit-Wrestlers documents Marsden's journey in search of Russia's southern frontier, a place of pirates and religious exiles, not to mention restive natives. Marsden was inspired by accounts he read in the Lenin Library of dissident religious sects, particularly the Doukhobors or Spirit-Wrestlers, who once populated the Russian countryside. Sent into exile on the Southern Steppe and beyond to the Caucasus, these people helped establish Russian hegemony on its fragile borders even while their presents in far-off outposts helped keep things peaceful in the heartland. Marsden first sets off for Rostov-on-Don, Cossack capital and father of crime (one of the most oft repeated phrases in the book is that Odessa is the mother of crime and show more Rostov is the father). Cossacks were essentially pirate bands operating on a sea of grass while following their own rules. It is in this region that Marsden finds the first remnants of religious dissenters as well as a burgeoning population of Old Believers (essentially unreformed Russian Orthodox who refused to follow 17th century reforms).
But religion is not Marsden's only interest in southern Russia: he is also looking for the people who lived their first, like the Adyghe and the Ossetians. War with Georgia also causes issues, since his ultimate goal, the place where the Doukhobors burned their weapons in the face of conscription, lies in the present day republic. The author does an excellent job of showing just how un-Russian many of these frontier places are, especially closer to the Caucasus, through his experiences without ever saying anything. In my mind this is the sign of a good writer, and I will definitely be reading more Marsden in the future. Highly recommended. show less
But religion is not Marsden's only interest in southern Russia: he is also looking for the people who lived their first, like the Adyghe and the Ossetians. War with Georgia also causes issues, since his ultimate goal, the place where the Doukhobors burned their weapons in the face of conscription, lies in the present day republic. The author does an excellent job of showing just how un-Russian many of these frontier places are, especially closer to the Caucasus, through his experiences without ever saying anything. In my mind this is the sign of a good writer, and I will definitely be reading more Marsden in the future. Highly recommended. show less
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Best Travel Narrative
32 works; 20 members
Best of Travel Narratives
142 works; 28 members
Books about Russia and the former USSR
67 works; 12 members
Author Information
Awards and Honors
Awards
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- The Spirit-Wrestlers: A Russian Journey
- Alternate titles
- The Spirit-Wrestlers And Other Survivors of the the Russian Century
- Original publication date
- 1998
- People/Characters
- Philip Marsden
- Important places
- Moscow, Russia; Rostov-on-Don, Russia
- Dedication
- For Charlotte,
whose expertise made it all possible - First words
- For the best part of one post-Soviet Moscow winter I travelled in to the Lenin Library and read stories of Cossacks and Old Believers and plotted a journey to the south.
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- Travel, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
- DDC/MDS
- 910 — History & geography Geography & travel modified standard subdivisions of Geography and travel
- LCC
- DK29.2 .M378 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics – Poland History of Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 107
- Popularity
- 301,627
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.91)
- Languages
- 5 — Dutch, English, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål)
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 1
































































