Young Heroes of the Soviet Union
A Memoir and a Reckoning
- Published: 6 August 2020
- ISBN: 9781407075006
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 320
Alex Halberstadt is a magnificent writer. Young Heroes of the Soviet Union is a beautiful book about trauma and its impact on one extraordinary family, and an incisive, radiant look at the long legacy of suffering and war.
Olivia Laing
A loving and mournful account that's also skeptical, surprising and often very funny... Lush and moving.
Jennifer Szalai, New York Times
Illuminating, dramatic... It's as if [Halbertstadt's] feelings about Russia were frozen in time when he emigrated, leaving shards of perception that are peculiarly incisive... Majestic writing.
Matthew Janney, Spectator
[An] elegant testimony to the subordination of human life to the will of an overmighty state.
Robert Leigh-Pemberton, Daily Telegraph
With its diverse stories, Young Heroes of the Soviet Union is excellent as a record of how a single family can be tied up in so many strands of history... A fascinating and impactful read.
India Lewis, Arts Desk
This terrific, gripping book, part family memoir, part history...[is] a superb evocation of the Soviet Union in the 1960s and '70s.
David Herman, Jewish Chronicle
Fascinating.
Julia Llewellyn Smith, Mail on Sunday
Surprising, sad, funny, and engrossing... This is history as memoir, and vice versa.
John Jeremiah Sullivan
Enthralling... Alex Halberstadt describes the disjunction between his Soviet childhood and his American adolescence with incandescent wit, a sometimes bitter but always compelling nostalgia, and great literary flair. This book is a triumph.
Andrew Solomon
This truly excellent book will transform your understanding of what memoir can do.
Wells Tower
An act of literary archaeology... [in] finely wrought prose... melding the genres of biography, history and memoir. The book is more than just an account of one family's ordeals: it is an engrossing account of dictatorship, war and genocide, and how the toxic legacy they left behind has etched itself into successive generations of Soviet citizens.
Daniel Beer, The Guardian