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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent - A window into the chaos of the "new" Russia
I happened to be going through books at work when I came upon this particular one; I'm a self-professed "Russia-freak", so it seemed the type of thing that would be just up my alley.

Randolph and her husband are both journalists, and lived in the USSR/Russia from 1991 to 1993. Instead of living almost completely in the "second society" of newly rich and expatriates...

Published on October 18, 2002 by cnyadan

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Still Relevant After All These Years
Twelve years old, but still valuable. The author sensed she was at a place and time when describing a wildly changing country would be interesting to many. She interviewed, and wrote, and the result is still worth reading. Her process captured much about Russian character and culture that is timeless. Any American looking to understand how these foreigners are...
Published on December 28, 2007 by Zato Ici


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent - A window into the chaos of the "new" Russia, October 18, 2002
By 
cnyadan (Bavaria, Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia (Hardcover)
I happened to be going through books at work when I came upon this particular one; I'm a self-professed "Russia-freak", so it seemed the type of thing that would be just up my alley.

Randolph and her husband are both journalists, and lived in the USSR/Russia from 1991 to 1993. Instead of living almost completely in the "second society" of newly rich and expatriates that Matthew Brzezinski describes in his book "Casino Moscow", or being almost completely on one's own as in Lori Cidlyo's book "All the Clean Ones Are Married", Randolph manages to pull off a fine balance between the two. This balance is maintained in Randolph's writing as well. She's a Western journalist coming to write about "everyday" Russia, and she tries hard to get the real story. One of the things that impressed me is that, although she used a translator, it was more to make sure that what she was reporting was accurate. There is at least one point in the book where she mentions about her translator not translating a certain question to her liking. Most Western reporters would have no clue if this were to happen, and I think it seriously limits our view of the world.

Randolph tackles a different subject as it pertains to the Russia she experienced in the book. There's one about the problems with housing, and attitudes toward private ownership (especially of land), as well as chapters about religion, cults, women's issues, homosexuals, the state of the arts (case in point: ballet), as well as others. What is impressive is the time she took to track people down and have serious interviews with them, rather than be satisfied with fluff pieces that could be easily made into simple anecdotes or pieces to feed into current stereotypes of Russia.

When reading this book, one can think that the conditions in Russia are unfathomably bad. However, it's not like the Russians can stop living because life there is crazy. Randolph starts the book with a story about her returning home one grey winter's day. She looks up and is struck by the beauty of a blazing light in the distance, and after a moment realizes that it is the reflection of the last rays of the sun on the golden crosses of a church. She compares this experience with her stay in Russia. As horrible as a lot of life there seems, there is something there that is enduring and beautiful. This is the sense that I came away with after finishing this book. I only wish that it was a little bit more current, as much has happened in Russia even after her last interviews in 1995.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Right Place at the Right Time, November 11, 2006
This review is from: WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia (Hardcover)
This book is an in-depth report of Russian society at the transition between the communist and capitalist state. Randolph arrived in the Soviet Union in the spring of 1991, and remained in Moscow for three more years. An experienced journalist on assignment for The Washington Post, she was in an ideal position to observe conditions and the lives of ordinary Russians in the communist and post-communist era. Over the course of her stay, Randolph observed many aspects of society, and divides her book into chapters by topic, including: women, marriage and family life, children, education, health and sickness, the arts, and crime.

Randolph was fluent in Russian, but still used the services of interpreters when conducting interviews because she wanted to catch every detail, every nuance of what was said. Indeed, some of the chapters seem to go on and on with detail. But most of the material is quite fascinating. We learn how couples used to have to wait for years to get apartments of their own, and then how apartments could be had instantaneously, for a price, or how people who had lived in the same apartments for decades were bilked out of their homes due to gullibility from having spent a lifetime in a welfare state. Randolph discusses health in great detail, providing not only mortality statistics, but also interviews with leading figures in the Russian health care system--and interviews with some stars of the new alternative health care enterprises.

Having run in to a few too many shady characters from Russia in the past few years, I must admit that I was a little dubious about finding any good news from this part of Eastern Europe. But Randoph's stories of the human side of history that is unfolding in Russia helped me feel much more sympathetic towards average Russians and all that they have lived through. She demonstrates that Russians come in many types, and the vast majority of them are struggling to learn what they need to do in order to survive in a world that has turned upside down. While it is true that some are despicable villains, for every villain there are many more heroes doing their best to make lives better for themselves, their families, and their country. This book is extremely valuable for the snapshot it provides of Russian life at such an incredible juncture in time.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Still Relevant After All These Years, December 28, 2007
By 
Zato Ici (Starbucks, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia (Hardcover)
Twelve years old, but still valuable. The author sensed she was at a place and time when describing a wildly changing country would be interesting to many. She interviewed, and wrote, and the result is still worth reading. Her process captured much about Russian character and culture that is timeless. Any American looking to understand how these foreigners are different would do well to start here.

The gems of insight are scattered randomly through the book. To find them the reader will need to learn lots about the transition to Capitalism. But it's a fine journey. Randolph is a good tour guide, occasionally biased by her American mindset, but worldly, literate, and perceptive.

I liked this passage on men: her Russian female friends said "their boyfriends and husbands were babies. ... They were beasts. ... They were docile on one level, waiting to be told what to do. ... On another level there were snarling at the world, driving automobiles and making love like angry hornets. ... It was not their fault. ... [They] suffered from [a] system that punished many of those who showed initiative." P. 82. Things change slowly. Here in 2007 this is still valid.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A readable book, but not a keeper, June 8, 2002
By 
Ray Farmer (Concord, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia (Hardcover)
Randolph talks about various aspects of life in Russia just after the fall of Communism, from topics such as the status of women, healthcare, sex, ballet and the fine arts, and criminal justice. In doing so, she tells the stories of a number of people, some sad and some encouraging, that she met while in Russia in 1992.

In talking about homosexuality, I found it interesting that Randolph stated that "virtually every Russian" knew that Ivanovo (an industrial city close to Moscow) was a lesbian hangout, of all things. When I told my wife (who is from Ukraine) this detail, she couldn't stop laughing and thought that this was one of the most outlandish things any American had said about the former Soviet Union. Additonally, Randolph makes the occasional feminist comment in the book that struck me as being divisive.

All in all, if you're looking for a book that depicts many of the changes brought about in the everyday lives of Russian people after the fall of Communism, then you may find "Waking the Tempests" interesting. But the reader should beware that the author comments on the Russian way of life through American eyes, and thus may not represent an accurate portrayal, at least from a Russian's point of view.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating but very long, October 14, 2000
By A Customer
I listened to the book on tape, the narration was excellent. What I particularly liked was that this book was about ordinary life in Russia, rather than the political situation. Lots of bleak description on all sorts of aspects of Russian life during the years following the fall of the Soviet Union. Fascinating, very long, and rather depressing.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars makes you appreciate the fact that you don't live in russia, July 11, 1998
This review is from: WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia (Hardcover)
i heard the taped version of the book...the narration by barbara caruso was excellent and the book was somewhat interesting . . . i just feel it could have been a bit shorter . . . i.e., the same point seemed to be made over and over . . . regardless, the new russia (in the early 1990s) still is not a place i would like to live in--or even visit.
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WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia
WAKING THE TEMPESTS: Ordinary Life in the New Russia by Eleanor Randolph (Hardcover - June 19, 1996)
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