The I Index

Maybe someday

45

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

29/100

Critics

61/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Janet M. Hartley

Publisher:

Yale University Press

Date:

February 2, 2021

A discussion of the Volga — the first to fully reveal its vital place in Russian history.

What The Reviewers Say

Mathew Janney,
The Spectator
In her concise, lucidly written new book, the historian Janet Hartley takes this uncontroversial premise and excites it with drama. This isn’t a book about the Volga itself, but rather the river’s role — physically and symbolically — in the turbulent making of Russia. For those in search of a topographical survey from source to delta, look elsewhere.
Tony Barber,
Financial Times (UK)
Hartley, emeritus professor of international history at the London School of Economics, has produced a study of the Volga that is as well-researched and accessible to general readers.
Steve Donoghue,
Open Letters
The Volga is enormous, one of the longest rivers in the world, and covers so many different kinds of territory that it might well be said to thread different worlds together on its temperamental path to the Caspian Sea. In telling the story of those worlds, Harley is faced with an impossible narrative; any riparian history can only ever be a judicious culling from an infinite trove of stories.
Farah Abdessamad,
Asian Review of Books
Janet M Hartley pens a vivid, human-centered story of the great river standing at a crossroad of peoples and cultures. She explores and contextualizes its significance to the history of Russia.