Soviet Baby Boomers
An Oral History of Russia's Cold War Generation
Donald J. Raleigh
Reviews and Awards
Winner of the Southern Conference on Slavic Studies Prize for Best Overall Book
Shortlisted for the Pushkin House Russian Book Prize
"A landmark...[Raleigh] has created a sophisticated and nuanced cultural history. His book, eschewing cliche about the necessary and inevitable stasis of Russian society or its long-term yen for authoritarianism, at the same time puts forward thought-provoking, and at times unexpected, material about the lasting and deep impact of the late Soviet era on the present day."--English Historical Review
"[A] unique, revealing oral history of the Cold War generation...This well-crafted book is required reading for anyone interested in understanding changing Soviet attitudes during the ear of late socialism...Essential."--CHOICE
"This book is a collective biography that will fascinate its subjects' grandchildren, to whom the world it depicts will seem like a distant planet."--Foreign Affairs
"What was it like to grow up under Communism and to live through and beyond its collapse? Soviet baby boomers tell their illuminating stories to an American historian of their country in this valuable book. Both Russia specialists and general readers will find it fascinating."--William Taubman, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Khrushchev: The Man and His Era
"Donald Raleigh's book creates a fascinating portrait of an elite group within the last true Soviet generation. Born after Stalin's great war, these people saw the best the Soviet system could provide and they witnessed its fall. Their story is a poignant but surprising one, a glimpse into another world, and Raleigh tells it with humanity and admirable tact. An authentic and perceptive oral history whose warmth and color make this work a model of its kind."--Catherine Merridale, author of Night of Stone: Death and Memory in Twentieth-Century Russia
"The book offers a valuable, and rare, comparative perspective by putting together respondents from the capital and 'closed' city. Their stories highlight many momentous differences in Soviet life experience that were determined by geographic location...This is a hugely valuable set of personal windows on grand--and less grand--historical events. It shows us how highly educated urbanites from a particular generation remember their country's passage from Stalinism to its version of capitalism. As Raleigh keenly observes, this tells us much about Russia today."--The Russian Review