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Hardcover Murderers in Mausoleums: Riding the Back Roads of Empire Between Moscow and Beijing Book

ISBN: 0618799915

ISBN13: 9780618799916

Murderers in Mausoleums: Riding the Back Roads of Empire Between Moscow and Beijing

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

A gripping journey through some of the planet's most remote and challenging terrain and its peoples, in search of why democracy has yet to thrive in lands it seemed so recently ready to overtake Across the largest landmass on earth, in lands once conquered by Genghis Khan and exploited by ruthless Communist regimes, autocratic and dictatorial states are again arising, growing wealthy on petrodollars and low-cost manufacturing. More and more, they...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Unbelievable!!!!!!!

Like ALL of Jeffery Tayler's books....he takes you where you will never ever go yourself and brings you the world.........None of us have the guts to do what he has done......We would be crying like babies.......This books helps you understand why we can NEVER EVER win the war in Afganistan

Hitory and Geography All In One

If one has been harboring a desire to travel through Mother Russia of long ago, as well as, experience the current Russia, after the break up of the Soviet Union in 1991, but has been afraid to do so becuase of language barriers, this is the guide. Armed with this book, a good map, a dictionary of all the languages and dalects of Russia, all is possible. This is the largest land mass on our planet. All climates, all terrains, all levels of education, all levels of ignorance to what we know as civilization having not touched some of these people since the days of Genghis Khan. Jeffrey Tayler starts his journey by train in Moscow. He covers all nations and peoples from that point to Beijing, China. The boundaries, histories and peoples of Chechna, the Tatars, the Yakuts, the Ingus. The lands of history of the Kazaks are discussed at great length. The Greeks brought Christianity to the people of Ossetia and Georgians. Facts such as: the Ural River being the waterway that to according to Russian tradition divides Europe from Asia. Descriptions of Suleyman Mountain and Kyrgyzstan's cpital Osh. Mention of many writers on the classic list of Russian's elite, such as Turgenev, Pushkin, Lermontov and most interesting the ballet dancer Boris Gudonov having been born a Tatar. Aside from these little tidbits of history and geography " Murderers in MMausoleums " holds a wealth of informtion useful to the amateur or the serious scholar of Russia, students of its former satellites and current crop of countries which have seceaded from Soviet Union. The book also has a chapter on Karaganda, the architectually ugly site built by the Soviets, made even more ugly in terms of human decadence of the soul. A place that was used as a Gulag during the Soviet Regime. Many interesting interviews and conversations hetween Jeffrey Talyer and young people he meets in his travels and throughout it all the marvelous feeling that one is not reading a dry travelog but a novel with sensual characters and history celebrating the spirit and traditions of a great people. I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Russian and history from the time of Ghenkhis Khan to the present.

Another Brilliant, Readable Adventure from Tayler

I hope that someday a great writer will chronicle the fascinating life of Jeffrey Tayler- a brilliant expatriate American writer that travels to some of the world's most difficult and dangerous places and manages to convey the essence of these places that most of us will never visit. Tayler speaks Russian, Arabic, Turkish, French, and spends his "vacations" in places like Chad, Dagestan, the Congo and Siberia, rather than Provence and Tuscany. In this new book, which may be his finest to date, Tayler takes us to obscure, little visited muslim republics in Russia like Dagestan, and then cuts across Central Asia and into western China. Unlike other journalists that breeze into a hotspot on an expense account and get a few cliche'd quotes from their cab driver and someone at their hotel, Tayler gets down and dirty with the locals in their language. He's not afraid to tell us about nights of drunken debauchery, where desperate people bare their souls to him to the sounds of "I like to move it, move it!" This is a great read, but sadly, Tayler is too good for this gengre- why people would rather read Eat, Love and Pray over Tayler's adventures is beyond me. An exhilirating read- highly recommended.

The Evil that Runs Through Men's Hearts

That Eurasia has had more than its fair share of tyrants more or less in the Ungern-Sternberg mold is the impetus for Jeffrey Tayler's new book Murderers in Mausoleums. Setting out on a journey from Moscow to Beijing that is bookended by the eponymous mausoleum residents (Lenin and Mao), Tayler wants to look at how life is being lived in the villages and towns of the Eurasian space today, unfiltered by analysts or media, to see how people are getting by, to understand how Eurasians can so value liberty yet so idealize dictators. It would be impossible to summarize what he finds, but if you have read Tayler's River of No Reprieve: Descending Siberia's Waterway of Exile, Death, and Destiny, about his trip down the Lena River, you know that half the fun is in the journey. (As reviewed in Russian Life)
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