Anonymous wrote:"Putin's People" by Catherine Belton is a great account of the rise of Putin and and the general takeover of the Russia state by all the various oligarchs, from pre-fall of the Soviet Union through 2021 or so--she's a Reuters reporter who was w the Financial Times for a long time based in Moscow.
There's also a good documentary on Netflix about the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, 2013-2014 -- can see the same kind of fervor and spirit there of the Ukrainians that they're showing now -- called something like "Winter of Fire"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, the five-part HBO series "Chernobyl" is really riveting -- with Stellan Skarsgaard, Emily Watson, and Jared Harris. Depicts how the accident happened and everything the Russian/Ukrainians had to do to fix as best they could, despite all the repressive bureaucracy. That gives a good understanding of some of the dangers the current conflict poses, given all the nuclear facilities there, how meltdowns occur, what the aftermath could be etc.
The book the series was based on is also really good.
Anonymous wrote:Also, the five-part HBO series "Chernobyl" is really riveting -- with Stellan Skarsgaard, Emily Watson, and Jared Harris. Depicts how the accident happened and everything the Russian/Ukrainians had to do to fix as best they could, despite all the repressive bureaucracy. That gives a good understanding of some of the dangers the current conflict poses, given all the nuclear facilities there, how meltdowns occur, what the aftermath could be etc.
Anonymous wrote:This goes way back to Hitler and Stalin, but Bloodlands by Timothy Snyder is one of the best books I've read. Not for the faint of heart, as much of the book deals with starvation and what that drives on to do.