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In Siberia
 
 

In Siberia (Paperback)

by Colin Thubron (Author) "The ice-fields are crossed for ever by a man in chains ..." (more)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 278 pages
  • Publisher: Chatto and Windus (7 Oct 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1856197980
  • ISBN-13: 978-1856197984
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 582,083 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #13 in  Books > Travel & Holiday > Countries & Regions > Asia > Russia > Siberia

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

At 58, Thubron had already lived 10 years longer than the average Siberian when he made his 15,000 mile trip and was as much a novelty to locals as they were to him. Until 1991, foreigners were only allowed along the Trans-Siberian railway. Now all is open, as Thubron writes: "The exhilaration of freedom never quite left me." In In Siberia he searches for the "core of Siberia"--a difficult quest in a land mass larger than the USA and Europe combined.

Siberia is Russia's wild east--pillaged by the Cossacks for furs, later populated by exiles and prisoners, who diluted the native culture of hunters and Mongol-Turkish nomadic tribes. Thubron travels from unknown town to unknown town, hunting at sunset for shelter. Some of it is as bad as you would fear--endless, uninhabitable, treeless tundra, frozen solid eight months a year. There are ghostly gulag towns like Vorkuta with its smoke stacks, "black detritus", and death camps where prisoners worked 12 hours a day, living in minus 40 until death (usually two weeks).He finds grim broken-down people living only for vodka, freedom having escaped them again. "Scarce jobs and high prices were the new slave masters."

At other times In Siberia is more surprising--the rebirth of Christianity and eager building of monasteries; Mongol shamans; the 2,500,000- year-old mummified remains of a princess; sweaty 85 degree temperatures; Akademogorodok, an abandoned science city where a lone professor experiments with cosmic consciousness.

Like many of the people he meets, Thubron's book is weighed down by history, but it does succeed in quenching the curiosity about that great blank in the Atlas. --Sarah Champion



Product Description

A few years ago it bacame possible for a foreigner to travel Siberia almost at will. This is the account of the author's 15,000-mile journey through this astonishing country, one twelfth of the land surface of the whole earth. He journeyed by train, river and truck among people most damaged by the breakup of the Soviet Union, travelling among Buddhists and animists, radical Christian sects, reactionary Communists and the remnants of a so-called Jewish state; from the site of the last Czar's murder and Rasputin's village, to the ice-bound graves of ancient Sythians, to Baikal, deepest and oldest of the world's lakes. This is the story of a people moving through the ruins of Communism into more private, diverse and often stranger worlds.

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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A bleak twilight across a forgotten land, 1 Oct 2001
This review is from: In Siberia (Paperback)
"In Siberia" is Thubron's painstakingly bleak account of a journey across the cold, oddly unknown region of Siberia. He begins his assessment of post-Soviet Russia at the Ural Mountains, and travels slowly west, following broadly the route of the trans-Siberian railway. His account is one of enduring struggle, against both the cold (in Dudinka, where the River Yenisei meets the Arctic Ocean, houses must be build on concrete pillars, otherwise the heat exerted by the foundations will melt the permafrost that lingers just a few feet beneath the ground, and cause the building to subside), and the economic collapse that has followed the collapse of communism. For most of those he meets, it is the everyday necessities of survival - food and warmth - that form the focus of their lives.

In parts, one can sense a fond yearning for the days of the Soviet Republic - when the collective farms functioned properly, with working tractors, to produce food for all. Now the mechanics of such planned economies have disintegrated, prices have spiralled upwards, the savings of the old have been rendered worthless and the young have little enthusiasm, other than to leave. Despite this, some do still find space to find hope, perhaps in the renaissance of forgotten religions, or perhaps simply in some strained, optimistic view of the future.

Throughout the book the shadow of the Gulag, the Soviet labour camp, lingers. Throughout Stalin's reign, criminals, political opponents, or simply those that were deemed to be a threat, were sent to the bleak wastes of Siberia for imprisonment. In the mines, inland of Magadan, on the Pacific coast, nobody lasted long; Thubron seems to touch upon suffering of the millions who died with a sense of quiet bleakness, rather like the snowy, barely living landscape in which they died.

This is not a book to read to cheer oneself up. True, the old Shaman, Kunga-Boo, playing wildly on his tambour, and enthusiastically requesting the author to return with a walrus, provides an endearing caesura within the enfolding sense of gloom. But the lingering picture that Thubron lyrically creates is of a people with a broken spirit, and a vast wilderness of slow, cold decay.

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12 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but author's ego gets in way, 29 Aug 2001
By Joseph V. McCabe (Khabarovsk Russian Federation) - See all my reviews
This review is from: In Siberia (Paperback)
I may be one of the few who does not appreciate Thubron's talents, especially when I compare his work with other travelers who have come through this area and then written about it (I should add, I live in Siberia).

A nagging problem in reading this book is trying to penetrate the author's descriptive narratives when he has a penchant for trying to grasp for new adjectives each time he describes a new scenes.

Another disturbing point was the author's cynicism with anyone who has survived Siberia because of faith (religious belief). His pre-conceived views and opinions about religion get in the way of penetrating the mystery which is Siberia.

Despite so much promise, I found the book disappointing, describing more the author in Siberia, rather than Siberia itself. I found reading "Reeling Through Russia" more engaging and interesting in describing the same area.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars superior travel writing, 17 Jan 2000
By A Customer
His writing is often so lovely I turn the page back just to read it again (doesn't happen often). Sometimes it wants to be poetic but is oblique and impenetrable. But the man can write far, far better than most. I spent three months in Siberia and I recognise all his characters, he conveys the desperation of the place beautifully, the shabbiness, but also the pride and the physical dimensions. Towards the end, the travel writing framework got wearying - not another priest drinking in a hut - but then he delivers the final chapter, which is superb and shocking and serene, and he is forgiven the slight tediousness or tiredness leading up to it. And for once, a travel writer who speaks the language of the country he/she is visiting, and doesn't pretend to by neglecting to mention translators. All in all, readable and memorable and a far cry from sunday supplement travel puffery.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Riddle of the Snows
What on earth drives Colin Thubron? Why, traversing a subcontinent whose name has become synonymous with suffering, would he face tedium, banality and appalling weather to seek... Read more
Published on 22 Oct 2007 by Roger John Maudsley

1.0 out of 5 stars In Siberia
I found this book to much about history religion and old tombs and not a lot about travel i found it extremely boring and hard work to finish johnfulden@hotmail.com
Published on 1 Jul 2007 by John Hall

3.0 out of 5 stars Bleak, fascinating, somewhat misleading
One has the impression that Thubron wanted to find the bleakest, saddest visions of Siberia. And find them he does, painting a portrait of Siberia as even more harsh and cruel... Read more
Published on 15 Feb 2007 by Malik Coli

3.0 out of 5 stars An impressive but cheerless book
This isn't travel writing as entertainment. I found it impressively written but almost relentlessly bleak. Read more
Published on 19 Oct 2001 by Charles M. Rowney

5.0 out of 5 stars Touching the heart of darkness
Dark suffering in snow-white Siberia, written about with such intense lyricism that I had to close the book from time to time and quietly ruminate. Read more
Published on 4 Aug 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Heartily recommended!
A journey through the hearts, soul and history of Siberia. Travel literature at its best and most engaging.
Published on 22 Mar 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars excellent evocation of modern day Siberia.
Written in an incredibly lucid and beautiful way. Brings you right to the country itself. His characters are eminently believable yet larger than life. Read more
Published on 13 Mar 2001

2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing after all the hype
Laconic and dry, this book never really got out of second gear and for all the adventure and exoticism of the location, I felt the author relied too much on old cold-war (and... Read more
Published on 6 Feb 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars wonderful but cruelly short
I felt the book was too short. Thubons excellent writing captures all that is intruiging about an intuiging place. highly recommended. more please!
Published on 26 Nov 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Powerful
My views seem to be the exact opposite of the Italian readers, after reading this book you start to realise what a vast and fascinating place Siberia is. Read more
Published on 31 Oct 2000 by Matt Pointon

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