Recommendations from our site
“Brodsky lived through the first part of the siege as a baby, in a one-room flat on the Liteiny, right in the centre of town. He brilliantly describes the atmosphere of the postwar city: the bombed-out buildings – ‘haggard and hollow-eyed’ – and the feeling of emptiness, of crowding ghosts. He’s good, as well, on how pinched and harsh life continued to be well after the war. One of his earliest memories is of being given a white bread roll – not a common black one – for the first time. It was such an event that he ate it standing on a table, surrounded by admiring adults.” Read more...
The best books on The Siege of Leningrad
Anna Reid, Journalist
Our most recommended books
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Walter Sickert: A Conversation
by Virginia Woolf -

Maybe the People Would be the Times
by Luc Sante -

Terroir: Love, Out of Place
by Natasha Sajé -

Nature Matrix: New and Selected Essays
by Robert Michael Pyle -

Unfinished Business: Notes of a Chronic Re-Reader
by Vivian Gornick -

Had I Known: Collected Essays
by Barbara Ehrenreich






