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Tomorrow You Go Home: One Man's Harrowing Imprisonment in a Modern-Day Russian Gulag
 
 
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Tomorrow You Go Home: One Man's Harrowing Imprisonment in a Modern-Day Russian Gulag [Hardcover]

Tig Hague (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 16, 2008
The haunting true story of a hardworking British businessman who became mired in the deadly, corruption-laden nightmare of Russia’s current prison system—and lived to tell about it, thanks to a love affair that kept his hope alive and the efforts of family and friends in Moscow and in London.

A twenty-first-century Midnight Express, Tig Hague’s powerful memoir brings to light the brutal machinations of Putin’s Russia—a world where the smallest mistake can land you in a frightening, Kafka-esque system, and where those in charge turn a blind eye to the law. Tomorrow You Go Home is the story of an ordinary man on an ordinary business trip who rapidly began to wonder if he would ever have his peaceful life back again.

Departing London for Moscow in July 2003, Hague said good-bye to his girlfriend and prepared to meet with clients in a country that was supposedly undergoing radical reform. Once the plane landed, Hague realized he had left a small amount of hash in the pocket of his jeans—an oversight that would bring him face-to-face with the reality of contemporary Russian justice. He was refused a translator, denied contact with the British Embassy, and while awaiting trial was beaten by guards in prison. His $50,000 payment to lawyers was no match for fabricated evidence, and before long he was serving a lengthy sentence in a frigid labor camp, where the work nearly cost him his eyesight and ruined his health. The only saving grace were regular visits from his girlfriend, who traveled to be with him and eventually married him in the prison. Taking its title from the favorite taunt of Hague’s prison guard, Tomorrow You Go Home provides a chilling glimpse into the still-desperate conditions behind the “former” Iron Curtain.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

An English junior stock broker visiting Russia for a series of business meetings in 2003 is arrested at the Moscow airport with a small bit of hash he'd forgotten in a trouser pocket. Thus begins Hague's nearly two-year journey through a Russian penal system that seems little changed from Iron Curtain days. After a brief trial, Hague is dispatched to Zone 22, a labor camp in the frigid plains of Mordovia, where he suffers from malnutrition, infections, and physical and psychological torture at the hands of brutal prison guards. Over the months, Hague learns the system and is sustained by the support of his family, girlfriend and sympathetic fellow prisoners. The rhythms of prison life are vividly presented—the fear, petty humiliations and the foul behaviors of men crammed into tight quarters. Hague draws sharp grotesques of the guards and prisoners, and does not spare the reader his own bouts of hopelessness, cowardice and venality. The book's claustrophobic tone would have benefited by more general detail about Russia and Hague's earlier life. Still, the author movingly presents his daily struggle to remain human in an inhuman environment. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Hague’s memoir depicts his incarceration in Russian prisons from July 2003 to April 2005. A derivatives broker in London, Hague had flown to Moscow for business, forgetting he had hashish in his luggage—and so began his legal nightmare. Naively expecting his stash to be treated as a misdemeanor, Hague learned quickly that the Russian criminal justice system runs on bribery and red tape, and that surviving its jails depends on wits, willpower, and a habituation to disgusting physical conditions and foul human behavior. Readers will surely cheer Hague on as he copes in this feral world, in which minor incidents assume menacing size, episodes that Hague dramatizes in details apparently based on the diaries he kept throughout his ordeal. That detail in itself, however, cues knowledgeable readers that Hague’s experience, however horrible and disproportionate to his infraction, was not similar to those imprisoned under the Soviets. Nevertheless, by expressing his visceral indignation about the corruption and capriciousness of the present Russian legal system, Hague induces caution about traveling to Russia and gratitude for Western rule-of-law. --Gilbert Taylor

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Gotham; First Edition edition (October 16, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1592403751
  • ISBN-13: 978-1592403752
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,401,827 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mud and Stars, December 11, 2008
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This review is from: Tomorrow You Go Home: One Man's Harrowing Imprisonment in a Modern-Day Russian Gulag (Hardcover)
An extremely interesting update to the apparently eternal theme of Russian prison camp Hell. But this one has a universal appeal that will grab you even if you know nothing and care less about Russia. I have read pretty much all the big famous prison memoirs of the 19th and 20th centuries, Russian and other. The story told here is by no stretch the most brutal or bloody among them, but it's a powerful riptide of reality that won't let you loose (I read it in a single sitting). This man's experience, more than any of the more outlandish specimens of the genre, will leave you with that churning feeling - This could happen to anybody. This could happen to me.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars `"It's a good place to die, Mordovia-you're halfway to hell already."', August 27, 2009
This review is from: Tomorrow You Go Home: One Man's Harrowing Imprisonment in a Modern-Day Russian Gulag (Hardcover)
The statement (p 37) "...at every single turn I had made the wrong call" succinctly sums up the state of things for British guy Tig Hague, a 31-year-old derivatives broker, about the time realizes he's in much worse trouble than he thought he could ever be. In 2003, Hague was taken in for questioning at a Moscow airport after customs inspectors found a small quantity of post stag-party hash in his luggage. He ultimately served 20 months of a seven-year sentence (later reduced to 4.5) in Zone 22, a special prison for foreigners. Throughout his memoir of "imprisonment in a modern-day Gulag," Hague tells his story with plenty of profanity and colorful language that drips with disdain about every negative aspect of a situation that, truth be told, was his own darn fault. After getting caught with a small amount of drugs he accidently brought into Russia, he misunderstands an airport employee's request for a bribe (which may have remedied the situation), signs a statement (supposedly about his side of the story) written in Russian (under duress and without a lawyer present), and cavalierly (and foolishly!) discusses his recreational drug use with authorities.
In the midst of my Gulag-related-book reading frenzy, I found Hague's story unsettlingly familiar in many ways to the memoirs I'd been reading about life in Stalin's Gulag. Modern-day prisoners are required to work long hours (Hague initially chalked button locations for prison uniforms in a sewing factory); drink greyish-looking liquids; eat bread rations; live in a constant state of filth; bribe camp leaders in exchange for special privileges and favors (including having ones case considered for parole); and suffer serious illnesses (he almost lost his eye to infection). On the other hand, Hague was able to supplement his meals with parcels of foodstuffs provided by family and friends; keep a journal; have contact with the British Embassy in Russia; and even marry his girlfriend (though in a brief, primitive-seeming ceremony). Despite his family's best efforts (and a £100,000 in bribes all told, according to a related article in mirror.co.uk), he ended up serving almost two years of a sentence based on trumped up charges.

Although Hague's obnoxious personality, reflected in a plethora of profanity and more than a few choice words for Russian guards and officials, annoyed me at first, it eventually grew on me. The same type of behavior that got him in so much trouble in the first place probably also helped get him out early. Tomorrow You Go Home is a sobering look at a "modern day Russian Gulag" that seems not to have changed much over the years. Also good: 13 Years in Soviet Prison Camps by Elinor Lipper, Alexander Dolgun's Story, and The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin's Russia by Tim Tzouliadis.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Harrowing is right, but the reading is just "ok", February 25, 2009
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Scott George (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Tomorrow You Go Home: One Man's Harrowing Imprisonment in a Modern-Day Russian Gulag (Hardcover)
Tig Hague's ordeal is compelling and harrowing. During many passages in this book you can almost feel the emotions you would have if put in the same situations. I liked that Hague is upfront with the mistakes he made that contributed to his ordeal.

But...there were too many instances where the writing lacked depth or insightfulness for me to fully recommend this book. Too many times, Hague decends into the easy description of his feelings of frustration with guards and prison authorities, wanting to "throttle" someone or "drive his head through a wall" is just a little too junior high school for me. Once or twice is not a problem, but it was frequent. Certainly his experience was horrifying, but failing to capture and communicate the emotions to a greater depth than that lessens the impact this book could have had. At times, I felt he was immature. maybe he was just not ready to write this book.

In the end, this isn't a bad book and I am not sorry I bought it. I just think there are more compelling choices out there.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
black zone, smoking shelter, parole date, parole application, sweet black tea, eye slot, master guard, riot stick
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Boodoo John, Hague Tig, British Embassy, Raisa Petrovna, Piet Central, Garban Icap, Sniper Alley, Tig Hague, Marlboro Reds, Eke Jude, Middle Eastern, New Eltham, Ford Escort, Red Zone, Benny Baskin, Some of the Africans, David Beckham
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