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OverviewTo be a Leningrader is to have a ""distinction which is as rare as any human being possesses.""--Fromthe Foreword In the siege of Leningrad, August 1941-January 1944, between 1,100,000and 1,500,000persons died, of hunger, of cold, of disease, of German bullets, bombs, and shells. The unprecedented magnitude and suffering of this most devastating of all episodes of war has been told by Harrison E. Salisbury in his recent best-seller, The900 Days: The Siege of Leningrad. Yet, as Mr. Salisbury notes in his Foreword to this book, ""the best way to feel the Leningrad epic is to read it in one of the diaries and that of Madame Skrjabina is outstanding in this regard."" Elena Skrjabina, a young graduate student and mother of two boys, had lived in Leningrad most of her life. Her eyewitness account covers the first winter of the siege, her escape over frozen Lake Ladoga with her mother, two children, and old nurse, and the odyssey of her flight for survival to the Caucasus, where in August 1942she was captured by the Germans and again faced an uncertain future. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Elena Skrjabina , Norman Luxenburg , Harrison E. SalisburyPublisher: Southern Illinois University Press Imprint: Southern Illinois University Press Dimensions: Width: 12.40cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.00cm ISBN: 9780809305117ISBN 10: 0809305119 Pages: 196 Publication Date: 01 October 1971 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsBeautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. --Library Journal """Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting.""-- ""Publishers Weekly"" ""A valuable human document.""--""New Yorker"" ""Beautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman.""""--Library Journal"" ""A valuable human document.""--""New Yorker"" ""Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting."" -- ""Publishers Weekly"" ""A valuable human document.""--""New Yorker"" ""Beautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman.""""--Library Journal"" Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting. ""Publishers Weekly"" "" A valuable human document. ""New Yorker"""" Beautifully written and highly readable, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. "" Library Journal""""" Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting. -- Publishers Weekly A valuable human document. -- New Yorker Beautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. --Library Journal Beautifully written and highly readable, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. Library Journal A valuable human document. New Yorker Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting. Publishers Weekly Beautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. --Library Journal A valuable human document. -- New Yorker Written in unadorned but eloquent prose that is remarkably affecting. -- Publishers Weekly A valuable human document. -- New Yorker Beautifully written and highly read-able, this is an outstanding work by an admirable woman. --Library Journal <br> Author InformationMadame Elena Skrjabina has been Professor of Russian at the University of Iowa since 1960. Norman Luxenburg, the translator, is Chairman of the Department of Russian at Iowa. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |