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OverviewINSPIRED BY ACTUAL EVENTS In 1933, the Soviet government deported over 6,000 ""undesirable elements"" (petty criminals, vagrants, peasants who had resisted collectivization) to a small, isolated island in western Siberia called Nazino Island. Abandoned without adequate food, shelter, tools, or clothing, the vast majority of the deportees died within weeks from starvation, violence, disease, and exposure to brutal weather. Reports of cannibalism were widespread and well-documented. From the author of The Lost Key: The Tragic Life of Blanche Monnier... SUMMARY- In the winter of 1933, during the darkest days of Stalin's Soviet regime, a storm of political purge and state-sanctioned terror sweeps across the Soviet Union. Among the countless victims of this crackdown are two men, Ivan and Dmitri, whose fates become inextricably linked when they are arrested and deported to the desolate, frozen wasteland of Nazino Island in Siberia-a remote, icy penal colony shrouded in silence and fear. Here, in the shadow of the Great Purge, the state's cruelty finds fertile ground in the bleakness of the Ural tundra. The deeper the winter creeps, the more the reality descends into a state of primal savagery. Men are seen burying their families in the snow to conserve heat. Guards fire indiscriminately at those who wander, leaving bodies to rot as fertilizer for the frozen earth. Hope becomes a dangerous luxury, and the line between survival and monstrosity blur. Ivan's illness mirrors the island's decay-his mind, once sharp and kind, now lingers between fever dreams and the reality of his own mortality, with his friend Dmitri watching and caring for him with as little as their circumstances provide. The story of Cannibal Island is not merely a chronicle of survival but an unflinching exploration of the human condition. It delves into the fragility of morality when stripped of comforts, institutions, and dignity. The narrative becomes a mirror, reflecting the depths of human cruelty and the essence of grace that persist, even in darkness. Ivan and Dmitri's struggle is emblematic of the broader tragedy: how the state's indifference and the environment's hostility erode even the most well-forged souls. Yet, in their bond, there is a quiet defiance-a reflection to the durability of the human spirit, even as the world around them crumbles into madness. The title itself is a grim understatement. LAST REMARK- For those who remain on Nazino beyond the winter of 1933, the survival rate plummets so drastically that rumors of cannibalism spread like fire. To endure, some turn on their own, trading humanity for a scrap of flesh. Ivan and Dmitri, caught in this maelstrom, become part of a silent chorus of survivors-men and women who, in whispers and trembling hands, carry the memory of what they had lost and the horror of what they had done. Their story is one of two voices in a chorus of silence, a reminder that in the direst of circumstances, the boundaries of the self are not always what they seem... For film adaptation inquiries, please reach out to BloomePublishing@outlook.com Thank you for your continuous interest and support. CONTENT DISCLAIMER This book contains graphic violence and may be disturbing for some readers. Reader discretion is advised. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ghenrietta Von BloomePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.336kg ISBN: 9798278078234Pages: 338 Publication Date: 30 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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