Let Our Fame be Great : Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus

Author(s): Oliver Bullough

History

The Caucasus mountains are a land of jagged peaks and rugged people, who for over 200 years have rebelled against Russia's attempts to add them to its empire. Oliver Bullough's extraordinary debut tells their story for the first time. Travelling from remote village to refugee camp, rocky mountain gorge to forgotten massacre site, he discovers exiles, fighters, lost sects, defiant survivors - and an unbreakable spirit.

General Information

  • : 9780141037745
  • : Penguin Books, Limited
  • : Penguin Books Ltd
  • : 0.375
  • : 28 February 2011
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 June 2011
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Oliver Bullough
  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • : English
  • : 914.750486
  • : 512

More About The Product

This wonderful, moving book flashes backwards and forwards over a terrain almost impossible to survey, and manages the feat Norman Stone Lively and impassioned ... a tragically neglected corner of our world - Orlando Figes Oliver Bullough's book is a painstaking, sensitively reported effort to knit together their [the people of the Caucasus] lost history - Wendell Steavenson Sunday Times A book that effortlessly mixes on-the-spot reportage and a wide-ranging history ... Let its fame be great - The Scotsman Bullough brings us exciting news, presented as short, gripping stories that ... The history of their resistance and resilience has been largely unknown for two centuries. Now their stories are sung by a champion and will resound beyond their boundaries - Ian Finlayson The Times An impressive debut ... heartfelt and compelling ... With this impassioned volume he has struck a blow for the glory of the Caucasus and helped to give voice to the voiceless - - Justin Marozzi Financial Times Bullough should be congratulated on his brave and tireless investigations into an under-reported region of the world - George Walden New Statesman Let Our Fame Be Great is a treat ... Finely bound, with excellent maps, Bullough draws you irresistibly into his narrative, fusing reportage, history and travelogue in colourful, absorbing prose ... The book is a pleasure, and most importantly, it is critical to understanding modern Russia with its worrying collective amnesia - Daniel Metcalfe Spectator Fascinating and ground-breaking ... Bullough has got plenty of dust, snow and mud on his boots from his travels recording the forgotten tragedies of the North Caucasus ... In the process he [has] unearthed many priceless nuggets of historic truth - Thomas De Waal OpenDemocracy

Oliver Bullough was born in 1977 and grew up on a sheep farm in mid-Wales. He studied modern history at Oxford University and moved to Russia in 1999. He lived in St Petersburg, Bishkek and Moscow over the next seven years, working as a journalist first for local magazines and newspapers, and then for Reuters news agency. He reported from all over Russia and the former Soviet Union, but liked nothing more than to work among the peoples and mountains of the North Caucasus. He moved back to Britain in 2006, and has spent the following years travelling for and writing this book.He now lives in east London. He likes to travel, to take photographs, to watch Welsh rugby, to cook and to read.