[Download] "Driving Down Russia's Spine" by Paul Richardson * eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: Driving Down Russia's Spine
- Author : Paul Richardson
- Release Date : January 26, 2016
- Genre: Essays & Memoirs,Books,Travel & Adventure,History,Europe,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 1005 KB
Description
In 2015, âThe Spine of Russiaâ â a month-long, Kickstarter-financed journey â took a mismatched duo of Russian and American journalists on a 6000-kilometer road trip from the frigid shores of the Barents Sea to Sochi, Russiaâs southernmost tip on the Black Sea.
The goal was to view Russia from the ground, to collect powerful images and honest human stories that offered a more subtle, complex picture of the United Statesâ resurgent global rival. The trip captured over 3000 still images and 43 in-depth interviews with Russians from all walks of life. This book is the story of the trip, intertwining fascinating subject profiles with digressions into historical and cultural themes relevant to understanding modern Russia. It is a story told with humor and with the insight derived from the authorâs three decades of intimate interactions with Russia.
Among the many interesting stories in the book:
âą An expedition to âThe Well to Hellâ
âą A music school in one of the most polluted towns on earth
âą An energetic youth activist branded as a foreign agent
âą Russiaâs largest manufacturer of barbells (who also makes cloudberry preserves)
âą A roadside berry seller recently paroled from prison
âą A blacksmith who is a Jehovahâs Witness
âą A bone-chilling trip to the foundation place of the Russian state
âą The slightly off-kilter leader of St. Petersburgâs Cossack community
âą A retired village doctor who canât stop working, because he wonât be replaced
âą A piece of Nebraska transplanted into the middle of Russiaâs Black Earth region
There were also craft beer makers, ballroom dancers, policemen, restaurant owners, an opera student, a priest, a single mother, an accessibility activist, teachers, docents, a best-selling author, soap makers, journalists, a sailor, a winemaker, and a woman taking on the male-dominated world of Russian hockey. And no trip to Russia would be complete without a run-in with security officials in leather jackets. So there is also that.
Taken together, the stories from this epic road trip create a compelling portrait of modern Russia and the people who live there. The book could not be more timely; recent events show how vital it is for Americans to continue working to understand Russia.