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This book should be taught in school history courses. It is an exceptional resource for Soviet history, it's well-written and well-researched. But most of all, it's accessible, nostalgic without being cloying or overly-sentimental, and it's touching. It happens to cover some of the subjects that interest me most: food, Russian/Soviet history, mother-daughter relationships. This book could've been written for me. I first took it out from the library, but I saw immediately I wanted to own it.
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Each ...more

In this book, the author recounts her family's history alongside the history of the Soviet Union. The author is a food writer, so much of the book also focuses on memories related to food.
I learned a lot about the history of Russia and the Soviet Union and found it really fascinating. I have to say that none of the food described in the book sounded very good until she started talking about recipes from some of the more southwestern Asian Soviet Republics.
There was something about the style in ...more
I learned a lot about the history of Russia and the Soviet Union and found it really fascinating. I have to say that none of the food described in the book sounded very good until she started talking about recipes from some of the more southwestern Asian Soviet Republics.
There was something about the style in ...more

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book, and googling images of Lithuanian branch cake, fish in aspic, and herring under a fur coat. What better way to share history than through food, in this case a madeline poisoned with ideology. A history of the USSR told through family memories, personal reflections, and gustatory delights covered in mayonnaise. As an emigrant asked to share her memories of the USSR to a TV audience in 2011, Anya asked, “But isn’t Moscow full of people who remember the USSR
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I've long had this quiet desire to visit the culturally-rich (yet WILDLY intimidating) land of Russia. This book stoked that quiet desire immensely.
I'm also really craving borscht now... ...more
I'm also really craving borscht now... ...more

What better way to tell the story of Soviet life for the past one hundred years than through the food of the time? Anya Von Bremzen brilliantly intermingles stories of her family with food stories and recipes to create this excellent book.*
*Cautionary note: This is just my very-humble opinion) I didn’t see a single recipe, unfortunately, that I wanted to try or even copy down. Lots of food that was as bleak as the gray Soviet lives.
*Cautionary note: This is just my very-humble opinion) I didn’t see a single recipe, unfortunately, that I wanted to try or even copy down. Lots of food that was as bleak as the gray Soviet lives.

Sep 18, 2013
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