Amazon.co.uk Trade-In Store
Did you know you can trade in your old books for an Amazon.co.uk Gift Card to spend on the things you want? Visit the Books Trade-In Store for more details. Learn more.
Salvage is the final part of Tom Stoppard's trilogy The Coast of Utopia. It is 1852. Alexander Herzen, who left Russia five years earlier, has arrived in London in retreat from a series of public and private calamities. Revolution in Europe has hit the rocks. 'I have lost every illusion dear to me,' he says. 'I'm forty. The world will hear no more of me.' But émigré circles in London (including Karl Marx) are buzzing with plots and intrigues, and Herzen's money, as well as his sardonic wit, soon have an outlet among them. With the accession of Alexander II, 'the Reforming Tsar', Herzen's revived spirits are boosted by the arrival of his childhood friend Nicholas Ogarev with his wife Natalie. Their journal 'The Bell', smuggled into Russia, enters its heyday in the struggle for the emancipation of the serfs. Will it be reform from above or revolution from below? At home the 'new men' who once looked on Herzen as their inspiration are in a hurry, and in London he is once more at odds with Michael Bakunin, who has escaped from exile in Siberia. Meanwhile Natalie Ogarev finds in him her romantic ideal, and Herzen's public and private travails are far from over.
{"itemData":[{"priceBreaksMAP":null,"buyingPrice":8.49,"ASIN":"057121665X","isPreorder":0},{"priceBreaksMAP":null,"buyingPrice":8.69,"ASIN":"0571216617","isPreorder":0},{"priceBreaksMAP":null,"buyingPrice":8.33,"ASIN":"0571216633","isPreorder":0}],"shippingId":"057121665X::9W6CR8lLG4%2F0cTwshOv862wM28s5m%2FxQzPaWNx0LWZ%2Bvgu9ro0unwKHujpJD23BrXdZdotTIecwVL6QTZH7rxFXyl92Q4FOI,0571216617::hkh4Xh9G2dTW%2BuzZ39A1EgCUNOsGpk2sLhzUJTQ62HJGm8rFYYRTJgyRh5Kf2%2BNKb022aiaOPIDLSDUg4qjX%2FsZZ7n7kv%2F0q,0571216633::453NFgQ3XKpTYcucrae3M3sMHciSgRr8NaXDDI%2FFEGRkUOnhoK9hLb3uxFU1kHqKazkXBk00fu%2Bvb9AhLME2VvxH8pey0stt","sprites":{"addToWishlist":["wl_one","wl_two","wl_three"],"addToCart":["s_addToCart","s_addBothToCart","s_add3ToCart"],"preorder":["s_preorderThis","s_preorderBoth","s_preorderAll3"]},"currenyCode":"GBP","shippingDetails":{"xz":"availability","yz":"availability","xy":"same","xyz":"availability"},"tags":["x","y","z"],"strings":{"showDetails":"Show details","differentAvailabilityAll":"Some of these items are dispatched sooner than the others.","addToWishlist":[null,null,null],"shippingError":"An error occurred, please try again","differentAvailability":"One of these items is dispatched sooner than the other.","preorder":["Pre-order this item","Pre-order both items","Pre-order all three items"],"addToCart":["Add to Basket","Add both to Basket","Add all three to Cart"],"showDetailsDefault":"Show availability and delivery details","priceLabel":["Price:","Price For Both:","Price For All Three:"],"hideDetailsDefault":"Hide availability and delivery details","hideDetails":"Hide details"}}
Tom Stoppard's work includes Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, The Real Inspector Hound, Jumpers, Travesties, Night and Day, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour, After Magritte, Dirty Linen, The Real Thing, Hapgood, Arcadia, Indian Ink, The Invention of Love, the trilogy The Coast of Utopia and Rock 'n' Roll. His radio plays include If You're Glad I'll Be Frank, Albert's Bridge, Where Are They Now?, Artist Descending a Staircase, The Dog It Was That Died and In the Native State. Television work includes Professional Foul, Squaring the Circle and Parade's End. His film credits include Empire of the Sun, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, which he also directed, Shakespeare in Love, Enigma and Anna Karenina.
Inside This Book(Learn More)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:5.0 out of 5 stars 1 review
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 starsHerzen's struggle brought to life31 Aug 2003
By Brittany Huber - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Tom Stoppard is arguably the single finest playwright of his generation, and the Coast of Utopia trilogy is a massive undertaking that in the hands of a less skilled author could have gone awry and badly. Stoppard though manages to make what could be a painfully pedantic history lesson into a moving portrayal of love, ideology, loss, and change.
The mess of Alexander Herzen's life, and those of his closest friends and family, is tragic in a really monumental scope. There are no clear places to lay blame, nor clear winners or losers, instead the entire piece is pervaded with a sense of futility (and I don't mean this negatively), Herzen trying vainly to convince his associates that the blood being spilled is of no use, and trying to mend the broken relationships surrounding him.
The history is neither dominate or secondary to the characterization here, rather Stoppard manages to make the historical events we know (or may not know) part and parcel of the volatile and fascinating lives of some of Russias greatest citizens.