‘A heartbreaking, romantic and utterly compelling piece of reportage that superbly tells the story of four generations… an astonishing personal history of love, death and betrayal.’
‘Owen Matthews has written of the ghosts of his own family… His parents’ love for each other, kept alight across the Iron Curtain, makes an extraordinary story. This wonderful memoir brings to life the human victims of a terrifyingly inhuman system.’
‘One of the most fascinating family memoirs of recent times. Few people could write as Owen Matthews does about his parents’ tormented love life and his maternal grandparents’ horrific fate with such a blend of affection and critical but unobtrusive objectivity.’
‘At its most touching, it is a love letter from a child to a mother – beautifully written and intensely moving… Stalin’s Children realises compellingly the dramatic and emotional potential of its material… it steers an impressive course between romance and disillusionment.’
‘An extraordinary story… There are many moments of almost unbearable poignancy.’
‘Gripping family history… This fascinating book is not a footnote to Soviet history: it is Soviet history, one of the millions of private tales of evil and astonishing endurance that make up the awful whole.’
‘In Stalin’s Children [Matthews] has written a superb chronicle of the 20th-century Soviet Union, seen through the eyes of his parents and grandparents: a Russian Wild Swans… Some of the stories will stay with me forever.’
‘Remarkable… not only does Owen Matthews write with extraordinary vividness… but his technique is more that of a novelist than a journalist – and a master craftsman at that… Stalin’s Children, when translated, should enter the canon of Russian literature.’
‘The letters, papers and confidences Matthews inhabits in Stalin’s Children rehabilitate all the generations they touch – including his own – showing how their times shaped their choices.’
‘Terror, stagnation, exile, hope and disillusion are the fabric of Russian history in the last century. These are also the backdrop for Owen Matthews’s poignant history… Few books say so much about Russia then and now, and its effect on those it touches.’
‘In a narrative that moves seamlessly back and forth through history… [Matthews] offers a poignant and insightful reading experience, leaving one with a keener sense of the unseen forces that drive present-day Russia.’
‘Remarkable… What makes this story striking is the family’s love, bravery and occasionally their simple good fortune… Thoughtful, unflinching.’
‘Epic… extraordinary… Some of Matthews’s most vivid pages evoke the children’s inconceivably brutal experience during the war, though he is brilliant, too, on what it was like to be one of Stalin’s children. [Matthews] seems to contain an essence of a Russia that preceded the turmoils and savage inflictions that he so richly describes in his book.’
‘Part memoir, part family history, and part meditation on Russia’s extraordinary capacity for tragedy and metamorphosis, Stalin’s Children combines emotion and drama worthy of a novel with the cool gaze of a reporter… [It is] impossible not to be moved.’
‘A moving book written with a tender yet unsentimental eye, a deeply intimate account that reveals through the lives of Matthews’ own family how the Soviet experience shaped, and destroyed, millions of people.’
‘Matthews details the plight of three generations of his family in brilliant, tireless detail. There’s romance, drama, life and death and personal discovery. And in a memoir, who could ask for more?’