PRAISE FOR The Man Without a Face

“In a country where journalists critical of the government have a way of meeting untimely deaths, Ms. Gessen has shown remarkable courage in researching and writing this unflinching indictment of the most powerful man in Russia…. Although written before the recent protests erupted, the book helps to explain the anger and outrage driving that movement.”

—The Wall Street Journal

“Powerful and gracefully written… Gessen’s book flows on multiple tracks, tracing Putin’s life back to boyhood, the story of his hometown of St. Petersburg, and finally the last quarter-century of Russian history…. For all of the ghoulish detail, Gessen’s account of Putin’s Russia is not overwrought…. [She] displays impressive control of her prose and her story, painting a portrait of a vile Putin without sounding polemical.”

—San Francisco Chronicle

“Written in English but with Russian heart, Gessen focuses on the places and institutions that bred the nation’s most resolute leader since Stalin… Some might say that Gessen’s interpretation is political. Of course it is… But more important, it is thorough. She has seen fellow journalists killed, has been harassed herself, and yet continues to write from Russia… Her urgency is felt on nearly every page.”

—Bookforum

“[Gessen] shines a piercing light into every dark corner of Putin’s story… Fascinating, hard-hitting reading.”

—Foreign Affairs

“Although Gessen is enough of an outsider to write beautifully clear and eloquent English, she is enough of an insider to convey, accurately, the wild swings of emotions, the atmosphere of mad speculation, the paranoia, and, yes, the hysteria that pervade all political discussion and debate in Moscow today.”

—The New York Review of Books

“What Gessen sees in Putin is a troubled childhood brawler who became a paper-pushing KGB man and, by improbable twists and turns, rose to the top in Russia…. [She] does not attempt to weigh up Putin’s record but rather examines his biography, mind-set, and methods… as a thug loyal to the KGB and the empire it served who never had a clue about the earth-shattering events that blew the Soviet Union apart.”

—The Washington Post

“Masha Gessen steps into the fray with a perceptive account of the new czar.”

—The Daily Beast

“Part psychological profile, part conspiracy study. As a Moscow native who has written perceptively for both Russian and Western publications, Gessen knows the cultures and pathologies of Russia… [and has] a delicious command of the English language… A fiercely independent journalist… Gessen’s armchair psychoanalysis of Putin is speculative. But it is a clever and sometimes convincing speculation, based on a close reading of Putin’s own inadvertently revealing accounts of his life, and on interviews with people who knew Putin before he mattered.”

—The New York Times Book Review

“[An] incisive bildingsroman of Putin and his regime… Alongside an acute apprehension of the post-Soviet dynamics that facilitated Putin’s rise, Gessen balances narratives of Putin-as-bureaucrat and Putin-as-kleptocrat with a wider indictment of the ‘Mafia clan’ that retains him solely as its Godfather.”

—The Daily

“Illuminating… It is with [the] explosive revelations that Gessen truly excels…. An electrifying read from what can only be described as an incredibly brave writer.”

—Columbia Journalism Review

“Engrossing and insightful.”

—Bloomberg

“A chilling and brave work of nonfiction…. With The Man Without a Face, Gessen has succeeded in convincingly portraying the forces that made Putin who he is today… [a] crafty, canny, power-hungry man whose hold on Russia shows no sign of slacking.”

—BookPage

Загрузка...