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Memory speaks volumes.(Book review)

The Spectator

| October 06, 2007 | Applebaum, Anne | Copyright Spectator Mar 7, 2009. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

THE WHISPERERS: PRIVATE LIFE IN STALIN'S RUSSIA by Orlando Figes Allen Lane, 25 [pounds sterling], pp. 784, ISBN 9780713997026 [telephone] 20 [pounds sterling] (plus 2.45 [pounds sterling] p&p) 0870 429 6655

It's a dangerous business, oral history, at least when you try it in Russia. Without oral history a complete history of the Soviet Union is almost impossible to write. Archival documents are dry, containing only the official point of view; memoirs, often written years later, are unreliable and frequently slide over important details. In an interview, by contrast, one can pose questions, prompt forgotten memories, or ask an eyewitness about things no one would put in print. It is no accident that many excellent books on Soviet history written in recent years (Catherine Merridale's Ivan's War or Simon Sebag-Montefiore's Court of the Red Czar) have made extensive use of …

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