“A Kingdom and a Village is a magisterial account of Moscow that reveals the city’s history and something of its soul through countless interwoven stories and colorful characters. This book is a gripping and enlightening journey filled with war and peace; tyrants and revolutionaries; famine, pestilence and plague; music, literature and theater; Christianity and Communism; death and rebirth. At a time when Russia is once again trying to remake the borders of Europe and the nature of politics in the world, Simon Morrison gives us a new way to understand this vast and ever-changing country through this singularly compelling capital city.”
—Ben Rhodes, New York Times bestselling author of After the Fall
“A gem of a book, exploring the people, the fables, and the history of Moscow, one of the great cities of the world. With vivid writing, and an astonishing body of research, Simon Morrison creates a mesmerizing tale of how Moscow came to be. Read it slowly, wander through the Russian capital with him, and you will understand when he says: ‘Moscow is hard to love, but I love it.’”
—Jill Dougherty, author of My Russia
“Simon Morrison’s riveting biography of Moscow is breathtaking in its span, covering architecture, music, Russian leaders’ decisions and the ordinary people’s response, society, institutions, and much more. It is also Morrison’s beautifully written story of his personal relations with the country that began in 1990 during Mikhail Gorbachev’s Perestroika, when he visited Moscow for the first time. It is a love story that has continued to this day.”
—Nina Khrushcheva, co-author of In Putin’s Footsteps
“A preeminent historian of Russian history and culture, Simon Morrison is the perfect biographer of Moscow, one of the world’s most fascinating and enigmatic cities.”
—Shaun Walker, author of The Illegals
“Russia is more than just Moscow, but it has long been its beating heart—at once bloody and life-giving—and this book captures its progress from insignificant hamlet to modern megalopolis magnificently. Every page pulses with individuals’ stories or historical insights, making this a wonderful biography of a city, its rulers and people.”
—Mark Galeotti, author of A Short History of Russia
“A marvellous book. It takes huge imaginative vision and a deep on-the-ground knowledge of Moscow, acquired over many years, to grasp the full dynamism of the city’s history. But Simon Morrison has pulled it off. His ambitious, erudite account is vivid and compelling, a wonderful conjuring up of Russia’s great capital in all its beauty, fire and fury’
—Helen Rappaport, author of The Rebel Romanov
“A revealing portrait of a city that has made and been made by an always difficult history….A winning account.”
—Kirkus