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Hunted Through Central Asia: On the Run from Lenin's Secret Police
 
 
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Hunted Through Central Asia: On the Run from Lenin's Secret Police [Paperback]

Paul Nazaroff , Peter Hopkirk
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 348 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks; 2Rev Ed edition (8 Aug 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0192803689
  • ISBN-13: 978-0192803689
  • Product Dimensions: 20.4 x 13 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,032,490 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

More About the Author

P. S. Nazároff
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Product Description

Product Description

'My position was uncomfortable. Here was I, in an absolutely exposed place, with Red Guards and commissars on every side. I had very little money left and no means of transport at all.' Paul Nazaroff was the ringleader of a desperate plot to overthrow the Bolsheviks in Central Asia in 1918. He was betrayed to the Secret Police, who declared him 'the most dangerous counter-revolutionary at large in the Tashkent region'. Thus began his extraordinary catalogue of adventures, 'a long and distant odyssey which would take me right across Central Asia . . . over the Himalayas to the plains of Hindustan'. As he fled from Lenin's men, he was aided by the indigenous peoples of the region, the Kirghiz and the Sarts, whose language and culture had been steeped in since boyhood. For months he was forced to live the life of a hunted animal. Peter Hopkirk has contributed a fascinating introduction to this tale of hair-breadth 'scapes and survival against all odds, as well as an epilogue which reveals Nazaroff's later fortunes.

About the Author

Paul Nazaroff was educated in Moscow and St Petersburg. His career as a geoloist, minerologist, and mining engineer was interrupted by the Bolshevick Revolution, which prompted him to become a counter-revolutionary agent. A man of wide sympathies and encyclopaedic knowledge, he was also highly skilled in the fields of ornithology, archaeology, ballistics, and botany, and was an accomplished linguist, huntsman, and taxidermist.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
ONE evening in Tashkend, about the end of August 1918, as I was sitting in my study quietly filling cartridges for an anticipated day's snipe-shooting, there pulled up at the steps of the house a smart carriage drawn by a splendid pair of bays. Read the first page
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By Molerat
Format:Paperback
Pavel Nazaroff was a Russian "burjui" (bourgeois) and a prominent figure in efforts to overthrow the Bolsheviks who had assumed power in Tashkent in 1918. He was imprisoned, released during a short-lived counter-revolution, and then spent many months hiding amongst the local Muslim population and wandering through Russian Central Asia in disguise before escaping to Sinkiang.

Although I wouldn't award this at times torpor-inducing account of his adventures any more stars than the previous reviewers, I do feel they are being a little hard on the author. His constant vilification of the Bolsheviks, though tiresome to the detached modern reader, is forgivable, bearing in mind they destroyed his world and tried their best to kill him. He could hardly tell us much about his anti-Soviet activities without endangering people left behind in Tashkent; indeed, it's surprising he admits any involvement at all. And the ripping yarns penned by British spies active in this region at this time (Bailey, Teague-Jones et al) tell us no more about their authors' politics and emotions, never mind the historical context. It just wasn't the done thing.

But the jacket blurb, promising "hair-breadth `scapes and survival against all odds" is indeed misleadingly OTT. You will enjoy this book more if you approach it as a work of travel or exploration in the vein of Freya Stark, Aurel Stein or Sven Hedin. Such tomes were very popular in their day and botanical, geological and anthropological observations - which Nazaroff copiously supplies - were de rigeur. Nowadays they fail to enthral, as we can get a glut of this kind of stuff on the National Geographic channel. Even so, Nazaroff's enthusiasm for nature is engaging and his scientific musings are not without interest. His description of a Kirghiz woman nibbling the seams of her husband's clothes to pop the lice lurking there (thus achieving simultaneous pest control and food supplementation) is an image that will stay with me a lot longer than I particularly want it to. Perhaps an idea for a new stunt in certain celeb-based TV reality shows?
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A bit dull 20 May 2008
By Gary B
Format:Paperback
The review by A Customer sums it up perfectly. What should have been a very exciting tale turns into a rather dull botany field trip. A great shame as Nazaroff obviously has a sense of humour which is unfortunately only intermittently displayed. It is the first time anything bearing Peter Hopkirk's name has disappointed.
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10 of 40 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
It's difficult to see how such an exciting synopsis can lead to so dull a read. There are moments of drama, but Nazaroff manages to swamp them with irrelevant descriptions of the flora, fauna and geology of the region.

The representations of people are often stereotypical - all Bolsheviks are leather-clad demons - and the author makes no attempt to put his own situation, or the wild action surely going on around him, in any sort of context.

There is little exploration of his own politics and emotions - he had to leave his wife and family behind, and saw his dream of a White victory over the Red Army turn to dust. None of this is discussed in any meaningful political, military or personal way.

This is a minor side note to an exciting period of history. It fails to illustrate the tension and danger of that time, or of the personal impact that must have had.

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