Dancing Bears: True Stories of People Nostalgic for Life Under Tyranny

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Product Details
Price
$24.00
Publisher
Penguin Publishing Group
Publish Date
Pages
262
Dimensions
5.2 X 7.8 X 0.7 inches | 0.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780143129745

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About the Author
Witold Szablowski is the author of What's Cooking in the Kremlin and How to Feed a Dictator. When he was twenty-four he had a stint as a chef in Copenhagen, and at age twenty-five he became the youngest reporter at one of Poland's largest daily newspapers, where he won awards for his features on the issue of immigrants flocking to the EU and the 1943 massacre of Poles in Ukraine. He lives in Warsaw.
Reviews
A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice

Finalist for the Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year Award

"Utterly original . . . Provokes a far-reaching and unresolved conversation about what freedom might really mean." --The New York Times Book Review

"[A] jewel of a book . . . Szablowski writes in a simple, vivid style . . . with [a] fine sense of the comic and the absurd. . . . His allegory is humorous, ironic, frequently absurd, and sometimes dark, but always full of understanding and compassion for its subjects, both human and animal. . . . The great strength of his book is its nuanced understanding of the reasons why so many people are nostalgic for the way of life they lost when Soviet communism disappeared. . . . Anxious and confused, they are not used to thinking or working for themselves. They yearn for the old certainties. Perhaps, in the end, human beings are more like bears than we imagine." --Orlando Figes, The New York Review of Books

"Fascinating . . . A set of case studies full of tensions and contradictions." --The New Republic

"A rattling good read . . . Vivid, skillfully crafted reportage from the wilder corners of the postcommunist world . . . Dancing Bears . . . is never dull. This is Tom Wolfe meets Franz Kafka, or perhaps a Milan Kundera remake of Dances with Wolves." --Timothy Garton Ash, Foreign Affairs

"Universal truths about animal behavior, including our own." --Ari Shapiro, NPR's Guide to 2018's Great Reads

"Wry and warm . . . [One of] my favorite books of 2018." --Annalisa Quinn, WBUR

"Szablowski is at the forefront of young Polish reporters going global." ―The Economist

"Witold Szablowski is a born storyteller. His reports from the post-Communist world read like fairy-tales with the stench of reality. Absurd, darkly funny, compassionate, his book is a literary jewel." --Ian Buruma, author of Year Zero and Murder in Amsterdam

"One of the truest and most beautiful things I've read." --Tim Flannery, bestselling author of The Weather Makers

"Should be required reading for anyone hoping to understand the growing appeal of authoritarian leaders in Eastern Europe today . . . Combining black humor with lyrical prose, Szablowski brilliantly captures the tragic disorientation of men and women whose lives were bifurcated by the sudden collapse of Communism and ruthless onslaught of neoliberal capitalism. . . . A poignant allegory about the human costs of regime change." --Kristen R. Ghodsee, author of Everyday Utopia, Why Women Have Better Sex Under Socialism, and Red Hangover

"A fascinating and wide-ranging book that shows how, across different and diverse species, old habits die slowly, if at all. Humans, like other animals, often don't know when they've gained freedom because conditions of oppression have become the norm and they're unable to adjust to a newfound lack of restraint. Szablowski's clever and metaphorical use of dancing bears to make this point is beautifully done." --Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado; coauthor of The Animals' Agenda: Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Age of Humans

"What a gem of a book. . . . So eloquent and original about the psychological transition from regimes." --Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present

"Fascinating." --Minneapolis Star Tribune

"A brisk narrative [and] a surprising look at societies grappling with profound change." --Kirkus Reviews

"Heartrending . . . A sharply drawn account." --Publishers Weekly

"A fascinating portrait of social and economic upheaval and a lesson in the challenges of freedom and the seductions of authoritarian rule." --The Awl