Volga Blues
A Journey into the Heart of Russia
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Jan 20, 2026
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Winner of the Estense Prize
A risky undercover reporting trip along Russia’s great mother-river, the Volga, reveals the tortuous history and frightening current fantasies of a nation.
Since the invasion of Ukraine and ban on foreign reporters, Russia seems to have sunk into an even deeper shadow than in the darkest times of the Soviet Union. Only by presenting himself as an historian was Italian journalist Marzio G. Mian able to penetrate the Russian heartland, leading to his groundbreaking cover story for Harpers’ Magazine, “Behind the New Iron Curtain.”
In Volga Blues, Russian history and literature inform every step of Mian’s revealing and perilous journey along Russia’s most culturally significant river, the fulcrum of its history, “the mother.” Along with Alessandro Cosmelli, his photographer; Vlad, their translator and fixer; and Katya, Vlad‘s girlfriend, Mian manages to gather firsthand accounts from ordinary Russians. They discuss not only the impact of the war, Western sanctions, and their country’s isolation, but how Russian culture has changed as a result. Stalin is back in favor, Lenin has been downgraded as a “Europeanized intellectual.” Newly sophisticated local and seasonal cuisine is all the rage. People cite centuries-old grievances to explain their fear of Western invasion, as they claim a willingness to accept nuclear apocalypse to save Russian pride. Talking with contemporary Russian intellectuals, entrepreneurs, priests, widows, mercenaries, and pacifists, Mian discovers how little the West knows about Russia and Russians. Deeply distrustful of democracy, yearning for the ideological and spiritual purity of the Orthodox Church, betrayed by and fearful of the West, and reassured by the brutal, fragile, ancient dream of an imperial civilization, they make clear that the Cold War has not yet ended.
In visceral prose, Mian takes us across the floodplains where the Russian Orthodox faith first took root, where the Soviet empire asserted itself, and where the neo-imperial project of Vladimir Putin’s post-Soviet autocracy is currently being consolidated. The result is a harrowing, haunting vision of today’s great clash of civilizations—between Russia and the West—including a United States that at times seems uncannily similar.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Italian journalist Mian makes his English-language debut with a tense and captivating chronicle of his illicit travels through wartime Russia, when he evaded its ban on foreign press by posing as a historian. Alongside a photographer and two Russian "fixers," Mian follows the Volga River from its source north of Moscow to the Caspian Sea. His interactions along the way offer unique glimpses into Russian society—he meets the widow of an enlisted Romani taxi driver who was killed in Donbas, the oligarch owner of an "agro-industrial business" that's ramped up production to compensate for sanctions, a cadre of reggae-performing pacifists, and Wagner Group mercenaries doing karaoke. The author also provides deep dives into the region's history that show how Putin has reinterpreted Russia's past for his own ends, including valorizing Ivan the Terrible and Stalin to bolster popular support for the invasion of Ukraine. Through Mian's eyes, Russia emerges as a paradoxical country in which the war is both ever present and a distant reality. Yet, harrowing evidence of the conflict bursts unexpectedly into view, as when Mian encounters a group of children from occupied Donbas "being given a crash course in Russification" ("Are they among the twenty thousand children Kyiv has declared stolen?" he wonders). It's an unsettling yet illuminating journey into an isolated and precarious society.