Join Books.org — it's free

Russia & Former Soviet Union - Political Biography, Soviet History - 1964-1991, 1991 - Present (Post-Soviet Russia) - History, 1917 - 1991 (Soviet Union) - History, Russia (Federation) - History - Political Aspects, Russia & Former Soviet Union - Politics
Midnight Diaries by B.N. El'tsin,Valentin Yumashev — book cover

Midnight Diaries

by B.N. El'tsin, Valentin Yumashev
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

"Today, on the last day of the outgoing century, I resign… Russia must enter the new millennium with new politicians, with new faces, with new intelligent, strong, energetic people, and we who have been in power for many years must go."

On December 31, 1999, Russian president Boris Yeltsin stunned the world by stepping down six months ahead of schedule. His decision was cloaked in secrecy, and his announcement rivaled the Eiffel Tower fireworks for dramatic effect.

In his new memoir, Yeltsin looks back on the struggles and upheavals in Russia over the last few years and his own role as the man who held the strings. Opening with his now famous Millennial Eve speech, he reflects on a decade of leadership, decisions, and crucial events, from the coup of 1991 to his first showdown with Parliament in 1993, Chechnya, and more. He ponders politics, his family, his relationship with Bill Clinton, and how he wants history to remember him. The style throughout is "vintage Yeltsin" - pithy, direct, anecdotal.

Midnight Diaries is the ultimate insider's story of the Russian Federation from 1991 - 1999. It's also the portrait of a man who, despite reactionary forces and the pull of communist doctrine, was determined to give his country and people a better future.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The title of Yeltsin's third book lacks the messianic fire of his first two volumes, Against the Grain and The Struggle for Russia. An account of his embattled last four years in power, this memoir is more personal than political, offering reflection in place of justification. The publisher promises "an international publishing event," synchronizing its release in Russia, Europe and the U.S. The author's aim is less grandiose--to help "even in some small way to make sense of recent events." Whether an account so strongly selective in its retelling can be said to "make sense" out of what was a particularly murky tenure is debatable. What is more important, Yeltsin' diaries restores lucidity and morality to a man whose image was ravaged along with his body by a punishing second term. Here Yeltsin explains his calculated strategy behind the steady succession of governments that outwardly resembled a flailing executive. He devotes much time and candor to the psychological impact of physical deterioration and his resulting determination to reunite with his constituents despite single-digit approval ratings. There are some strange moments as well. Yeltsin says, for example, he received intelligence in 1996 of a plot by U.S. Republicans to undermine President Clinton by sending a beautiful young "provocateur" into his White House circle. This tip is characteristic of Yeltsin, who often included impulsive handwritten comments in his speeches that his aides had previously edited from the TelePrompTer. Not a monotonous list of dates, this thematically organized book is well written and enlightening. With a first serial in Newsweek and an interview with the author on 60 Minutes, Yeltsin's new diary should draw a larger readership than his first two. (Oct. 17) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
September 29, 2000
Publisher
New York : Public Affairs, c2000.
Pages
432
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781586480110

Similar books