The Whisperers: Private Life in Stalin's Russia
Massive in sweep, cast, and length, this latest of Figes' books sets out to capture how life in Stalin's Soviet Union was lived, endured, rationalized, suffered, and, in many cases, embraced by those both high and low. Although scarcely the first study of Stalinism's impact on private lives (as the book's promotional materials falsely claim), it is by far the most exhaustive. Figes mines and merges multiple archives, memoir literature, and an immense number of interviews to capture the voices of both victims and victimizers. The melancholy panorama moves slowly from the blinkered idealism and cruelties of the early revolutionary years to the terror of high Stalinism to its lingering echo well beyond the tyrant's death, even beyond the Soviet Union itself. The whispering was not merely the conversation risked only in the narrowest circle of friends and family, not merely the behind-the-back betrayals and denunciations but, most poignantly, the surviving victim's past, buried or denied to even his or her eventual spouse and children.
Related
In the wake of Sunday's contested parliamentary elections, the Russian security services have made obvious and clumsy efforts to shut down independent news sources. But controlling information online will prove impossible, and continued attempts to do so will only backfire.
The electoral triumph of opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko and the victory of the Ukrainian people over their country's corrupt leadership represent a new landmark in the postcommunist history of eastern Europe, a seismic shift Westward in the geopolitics of the region. But what will come next for the new president--and the rest of the former Soviet Union?
President Viktor Yanukovych has led Ukraine, no stranger to crisis, into another round of turmoil. He has rolled back democracy while failing to take on corruption or take the country closer to Europe. Now, much of the public has turned against him -- and the country could be headed for more unrest.

Sign-up for free weekly updates from ForeignAffairs.com.