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I Love Russia

Reporting from a Lost Country

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Elena Kostyuchenko is an important guide to the 21st century." —Timothy Snyder, author of The Road to Unfreedom
"A fascinating, frightening, compulsively readable chronicle of life in Putin's Russia.... Her stories are unforgettable, and deeply important.” ― Carol Off, author of All We Leave Behind

“Would you like to know where Putin comes from? What the Russians are like today? And why? Read this book." ― Svetlana Alexievich, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
To be a journalist is to tell the truth.

I Love Russia is Elena Kostyuchenko's fearless attempt to document Putin's Russia as experienced by those it systematically and brutally erases: village girls recruited into sex work, queer people in the outer provinces; patients and doctors in a Ukrainian maternity ward; and reporters like herself, at risk not only because of her work but because she lived openly as a queer woman and LGBTQ activist in a deeply homophobic state. It takes us to places that non-Russians have never seen and brings us voices we have never heard.
At once uncompromising and deeply humane, her book stitches together reportage and personal essays into a kaleidoscopic, often otherworldly journey. Here is Russia as it is, not as we imagine it.
I Love Russia may be the last work from her homeland Kostyuchenko will publish for a long time—perhaps ever. She writes as she does, because she is driven by the conviction that the greatest form of love and patriotism is criticism. And because the threat of Putin's Russia extends beyond herself, beyond Crimea and beyond Ukraine.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 14, 2023
      In this sharp-edged debut, Kostyuchenko shares experiences from her harrowing career as a reporter for Novaya Gazeta, a Moscow-based independent newspaper. With a free-flowing style, she describes covering the war in Donbas, Ukraine, in 2004 (“I was caught in the shelling twice. I learn that I can run on all fours. I glide along in long leaps... I don’t believe I am going to die”); deplores the Putin regime; and writes about the contract killings of six colleagues, including Anna Politkovskaya, whose exposés on Putin’s Second Chechen War inspired Kostyuchenko to become a reporter. With gritty determination, she ventures beyond the Kremlin and its state-managed propaganda: she encamps in an abandoned hospital in Moscow occupied by squatters and reports on Russia’s growing homeless subculture; mingles with prostitutes in a roadside brothel; travels to the Arctic to report on the alarming numbers of Nganasan people (“the northernmost people on our continent”) committing suicide; and in the most bizarre story of the mix, tries to help a widow recover the body of her husband, who was killed during the battle for the Donetsk Airport in 2012. (Putin denied Russian soldiers were fighting in Donetsk, so the morgue denied having the body.) Throughout, Kostyuchenko’s journalistic integrity is unquestionable and the dangers she faces are very real. It’s a vivid and poignant account.

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  • English

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