The Degaev Affair Terror and Treason in Tsarist Russia Richard Pipes
- Price: £14.95
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- Format:
- Paperback
- Publication date:
- 01 May 2005
- ISBN:
- 9780300107722
- Dimensions:
- 168 pages: 203 x 127 x 9mm
- Illustrations:
- black & white illustrations
Categories:
This book tells for the first time the extraordinary story of Sergei Degaev, a political terrorist in tsarist Russia who disappeared after participating in the assassination of the chief of Russia's security organization in 1883. Those who knew and admired Alexander Pell at the University of South Dakota never guessed that he was actually Degaev, a revolutionary who had reinvented himself as a quiet mathematics professor. "An amazing story, part Dostoevsky, part Conrad...Remarkable."-Michael J. Ybarra, Wall Street Journal "One of the most distinguished historians of Russia ...[gives] us a real-life thriller that is also a cautionary tale rich with insight into depths of the human psyche."-David Pryce-Jones, Commentary "Absorbing, brilliantly researched...[A] fascinating display of scholarly detective work."-Raymond Carr, Spectator "Pipes is the finest historian of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Russia...[His] Degaev Affair takes the reader through the dark and terrifying alleyways of the historical underworld. As a story, it ranks as a true-life version of Conrad's Under Western Eyes." -Nikolai Tolstoy, Literary Review "A brilliant history of treason, deception, terror, and academe in the underworld of Imperial Russia and the respectability of midwestern U.S. universities."-Simon Sebag Montefiore, Financial Times "Fascinating."-Orlando Figes, New York Review of Books
Richard Pipes is Baird Professor of History, Emeritus, Harvard University. He is the author or editor of twenty-six books, including The Unknown Lenin: From the Secret Archive and Vixi: Memoirs of a Non-Belonger, both published by Yale University Press.
"a superb true detective-story of terrorism and mystery by one of the great historians of Russia" Simon Sebag Montefiore, The Sunday Telegraph; "absorbing, brilliantly researched" Raymond Carr, The Spectator; "Richard Pipes is the first historian of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Russia... The Dagaev Affair takes the reader through dark and terrifying alleyways of the historical underworld." Nikolai Tolstoy, Literary Review; "An amazing story, part Dostoevsky, part Conrad... Remarkable." Michael J. Ybarra, Wall Street Journal; "One of the most distinguished historians of Russia... gives us a real-life thriller that is also a cautionary tale rich with insight into depths of the human psyche." David Pryce-Jones, Commentary"
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