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Successor: Boris Nemtsov, Vladimir Putin and the Decline of Modern Russia [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 800 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x153 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Pushkin Press
  • ISBN-10: 1782277250
  • ISBN-13: 9781782277255
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 800 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x153 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Pushkin Press
  • ISBN-10: 1782277250
  • ISBN-13: 9781782277255
Teised raamatud teemal:
HOW RUSSIA LOST ITS CHANCE OF FREEDOM: A landmark work of political history detailing the decline of modern Russia, taking us right up to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

Brilliantly told through the tumultuous life and brutal assassination of Boris Nemtsov (1959-2015).


When Russia emerged from the debris of 70 years of Communist party rule, the country offered signs of hope it would become a democracy and a respected player on the international scene. Instead, it turned into a dictatorship, one which has no respect for human rights, murders and imprisons its political opponents, and launched a war on a scale not seen in Europe since the end of World War II.

How did this happen?

The Successor explores recent Russian history through the life of the Russian liberal leader Boris Nemtsov, who started his political career in the late 80s—at the height of Gorbachev’s Perestroika—and was assassinated in early 2015 beside his Ukrainian partner Anna Durytska, on a bridge near the Kremlin.

Nemtsov took part in or witnessed all the landmark events that shaped Russia and its political trajectory, from the first free national elections and the coup attempt of 1991 to the annexation of Crimea in 2014. Nemtsov’s fate reflects Russia’s fate. At the time of his assassination, Nemtsov was helping to organize a rally against the Russian military intervention in Ukraine and the Russian financial crisis.

Drawing on vast numbers of archival materials and off-the-record interviews with figures such as Alexey Navalny, exiled Russian journalist Mikhail Fishman constructs a comprehensive, landmark work of political journalism. As engrossing as it is disturbing, The Successor is both a biography of Nemtsov and of Russia itself.

Arvustused

"Mikhail Fishman, a veteran journalist of the Putin era, tells the Nemtsov story with extraordinary reportorial detail and a profound sense of what could have been." David Remnick, author of Lenin's Tomb

"An engrossing account of Russia's fleeting brush with democracy and its slide back into authoritarian rule, told through the life of a man once expected to succeed Yeltsin. Fishman brilliantly evokes the charged atmosphere of those years, a time when anything seemed possibleuntil it wasn't." Daniel Treisman, co-author of Spin Dictators: The Changing Face of Tyranny in the 21st Century

"[ A] fascinating account of two menand two irreconcilable visionsfor Russias future... An intimate portrait of political rivals at the moment Russias fragile freedom gave way to authoritarian rule." Kirkus Reviews

"Richly detailed... An intricate, political cautionary tale." Publishers Weekly

"For anyone who wants to understand how, despite all the hopes for freedom and democracy as Soviet communism was dying in the 1980s, Russia has turned back into one of the worlds worst tyrannies, this excellent book is as good a place as any to start. It is less a biography of Nemtsov than the story of modern Russia seen through his subjects eyes... A vaulable reminder of one of Russias important martyrs for freedom." The Sunday Times

"Much more than a biography... A fascinating insider account of Russias descent from imitation democracy to fully-fledged tyranny, with Nemtsovs life as a connecting thread." The Irish Times

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 1987-89: How it all Began
Chapter 2 1989-1990: Great Expectations
Chapter 3 1991: The Last Battle
Chapter 4 1991: A New Country
Chapter 5 1992-1993: The Capital of Reform
Chapter 6 Winter 1992 - Spring 1993: Two Centres of Power
Chapter 7 Summer-Autumn 1993: Breaking the Deadlock
Chapter 8 1993-1995: The Successor
Chapter 9 1991-1994: Chechnya and the Unnecessary War
Chapter 10 1995-1996: Peacemaker
Chapter 11 1996: Communism or Democracy
Chapter 12 1997: First Deputy Prime Minister Nemtsov
Chapter 13 1997: A Boat Going Over a Waterfall
Chapter 14 1998: The Emperor's Last Journey
Chapter 15 1998: The point of no return
Chapter 16 1996-1998: Putin
Chapter 17 1998-1999: President-2000
Chapter 18 1999-2000: Successor 2.0
Chapter 19 2000-200: First Blood
Chapter 20 2002: Nord-Ost
Chapter 21 2003: The Other Russia
Chapter 22 2004: Life on the Sidelines
Chapter 23 2004: The Orange Revolution
Chapter 24 2005-2009: The End of the Revolution
Chapter 25 2005-2008: Sovereign Democracy
Chapter 26 2004-2008: Putin's Warrior
Chapter 27 2008-2010: The Thaw
Chapter 28 2010: Arrest
Chapter 29 2010-2011: The rook and King Change Places
Chapter 30 2007-2011: The Dude from Marino Who Reinvented Politics
Chapter 31 2011: Bolotnaya Square
Chapter 32 2012: The Rout of the Bolotnaya Square Movement
Chapter 33 2013: Two campaigns
Chapter 34 2013-2014: Euromaidan
Chapter 35 2014: Russia after Crimea
Chapter 36 27 February 2015: The Last
Chapter
Chapter 37 Five Years Later: 2020
Epilogue
Mikhail Fishman is one of Russia's leading political journalists. Active since the late 1990s, he has chronicled Russia's dramatic political life. He served as editor-in-chief of Russian Newsweek and The Moscow Times, as well as hosting the Friday night news round-up at independent news network TV Rain. In 2017, Fishman and Vera Krichevskaya released The Man Who Was Too Free, a documentary feature on Boris Nemtsov. It was the highest-grossing documentary in Russia in at least a decade and laid the groundwork for this book, which was an instant bestseller on Russian publication in 2022. Fishman faced increasing intimidation and suppression from the state; when Putin launched the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, he left for Amsterdam, where he now lives in exile with his family.