Till My Tale Is Told: Women's Memoirs of the Gulag FROM THE PUBLISHER
During the Soviet era, millions of Soviet citizens were denounced, arrested, and imprisoned on fabricated charges of conducting "anti-state" activities. Till My Tale Is Told recounts the testimonies of women whose family lives and careers were brutally disrupted by the nightmare of false accusation, torture, humiliation, hunger, and unspeakable deprivation. The women in this book were fortunate: unlike many others, they survived.. "Published in Moscow in 1989 and now translated into English for the first time, the narratives collected in this volume were written illegally and for many years hidden away from public view. Although in 1956 political prisoners began to be officially rehabilitated, their writings were repressed as "slandering the Soviet system." What emerges from these moving testimonies is not only the brutality these women endured but also the extraordinary tenderness, kindness, and humanity they maintained in unimaginably barbarous conditions.
FROM THE CRITICS
Bennett - Times Literary Supplement
Till My Tale is Told is a fascinating, brave and in many ways heartening book. By letting its memoirists speak for themselves, it reveals what a sweeping overview misses: the courage, endurance and intelligent sceptisism fostered by suffering.
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
How extraordinary it is that compossion and tenderness may flourish in the cruellest conditions; how stubbornly and bravely people survive them. Doris Lessing
For anyone trying to comprehend the Soviet tragedy, the testimonies in this book are essential...To the statistics on the millions jailed, shot, or starved, these eloquent voices add a human face. Adam Hochschild