Cover Image: The Volga

The Volga

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Member Reviews

This is an extremely well-researched book which gives a new angle on the long and complex history of those living in the Volga Basin, not only the Russians, and those who moved through the region using this vast river for trade. I enjoyed the ebook so much that I now have the excellent quality hard copy.

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I've been reading this one forever, it seems. And that isn't a reflection of how good the book is. Because it is actually a very well researched and interesting look at the Volga river. It's just quite hefty in its scope, but definitely worth the read. Especially if you are a history buff!

Side Note: I LOVE this cover!

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It's simply impossible to dissociate the Volga from
Russia and its soul.
In this very exhaustive history of one of the most formidable and largest rivers in Europe, Janet Hartley gives us a very detailed history of the Volga and its place as the major meeting place of Eurasian civilization and
its historical, cultural, economical and social importance in Russian civilization & beyond.

Thoroughly researched and very scholarly, I found this incredible biography
so captivating that it was almost unputdownable. A worthy addition to Russian and European history and a very accessible book despite its length.

Many thanks to Netgalley and Yale University Press for giving me the opportunity to read this incredible book prior to its release date

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An academic and meticulously researched exploration of the Volga river, which in spite of its scholarly approach manages to be at the same time an accessible and very readable text, and an enjoyable read.

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Well, I'm very glad to report this book is both very heavy in its subject matter – starting with pre-Norman city states with their varying influences on the locals – and highly readable. It serves as a great source for historians genning up on a lot of Russian (and indeed pre-Russian) history, and as a great time-passer for the general browser who might perchance stumble this way.

So the lower Volga, the half of it nearer its end at the Caspian Sea, was a spread of different regional influences, at least until one from slightly further north was in the ascendant – the Rus. They couldn't have it all their way, with Genghis Khan's grandson and the Golden Horde invading and staying around for generations. But they finally did, once they were more recognisably what we'd call Russians – they soon captured the key city-states of the river, and made it theirs with their monasteries and their kremlins. Two insurrectionists were major blips, but only showed why the Volga is still such a key note in the flavour that is Russia – a melting pot of ethnicities, tradesmen, brigands, whose banks combine a series of large river-port cities surrounded by days' sailing through wilderness, with agricultural success on one side and empty poverty on the other... Nothing seems at times more Russian – it even grows to be "an obedient subject of the Russian empress" in at least society thinking.

The book manages to swerve almost into geography (and a bit of psycho-, with the river's perception in the culture and psychology of Russians), and ecology, before hitting us and the region with serf rights and land reforms, and then all of the twentieth century and all that that entailed.

There's no doubting the book's heft, with almost a third given to notes, bibliography etc, and commendable maps and more. I only asked for it on an inkling that it would teach me something about a corner of the country I've not been privy to before (having only been to Russia the once), but my intuition was right. With all the possible authority or proof in possession of a non-historian, I can declare my assumption this takes an almost post-doc level of historical focus, and makes it as readable as if the whole thing were an A-level set text. I can only see myself giving it five stars as a result.

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