Description
Book SynopsisJoanna Lillis is a Kazakhstan-based journalist reporting on Central Asia whose work has featured in
the Guardian, The Economist and the
Independent newspapers,
the Eurasianet website and
Foreign Policy and
POLITICO magazines. Prior to settling in Kazakhstan in 2005, she worked for BBC Monitoring, the BBC World Service's global media tracking service. She studied Russian in the Soviet republics of Belorussia and Ukraine before the collapse of the USSR.
Trade ReviewLillis traveled widely across the country, carried out an impressive number of interviews, and followed several key events… She also closely explored the stories and experiences of numerous [people]... Her work demonstrates that [Kazakhstan] has become more secretive, authoritative, and oppressive. * CHOICE *
Astute, refreshing and revelatory; it is also surprisingly tender, showing not only her affection but her care in trying to make sense of a country that needs to be understood warts and all ... It is not easy to look beneath the surface and make sense of a country of such contrasts and complexities, especially one that is in transition. You don’t need a book about Kazakhstan to realise that the world is changing; but reading
Dark Shadows is a great place to start for anyone wanting to see how and why Central Asia matters in the 21st century. -- Peter Frankopan * The Spectator *
Dark Shadows reads like a thriller. Lillis knows exactly how to investigate and tell stories, which characters readers will relate to or abhor, and how sources need to be interrogated & balanced. * Asian Affairs *
This is a fine book, beautifully written and with just the right blend of affection and censure. Lillis has rendered a great public service by dispelling some of the myths and caricatures that have gathered around Kazakhstan, which remains one of the world’s least well-understood countries. * Eurasianet *
Through in-depth interviews and good access to a range of Kazakh public figures, the book presents a powerful tale of injustice, corruption and fear ... An interesting and comprehensive addition to scholarship on Eurasia and post-Soviet and Central Asian studies at a time of renewed interest in the region at the crossroads between China and Russia. * Europe-Asia Studies *
The best book in English in the last decade on developments in Kazkahstan -- William Courtney, Adjunct Senior Fellow at the RAND Corporation, and former US ambassador to Kazakhstan
This is the essential book about an increasingly important, but highly secretive, country. With a keen eye and sharp analysis, Joanna Lillis goes beyond the 'post-Soviet' cliches to explore the depths of Kazakhstan's politics, history and money -- Peter Pomerantsev, author of Nothing is true and Everything is Possible: Adventures in Modern Russia
Table of ContentsMap of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan historical timeline Note on transliteration and names Introduction
I. The Making of a Potentate 1 Arise, Kazakhstan
2 A Family Affair
3 Don’t Mess With the Boss
4 Fault Lines in the Feel-Good Factor
5 Publish and Be Damned
6 Trials and Tribulations
7 Back to the USSR
8 Stop the Presses
9 Bread and Circuses
10 End of an Era
II. Identity Crisis 11 Kingdom of the Kazakhs
12 Mother Russia
13 Death to the Past
14 The Gulag Archipelago
15 Exile of the Innocents
16 Sparks of Tension
17 December of Discontent
18 Lure of the Land
19 Homeward Bound
20 Behind the Red Wall
III. Stories from the Steppe 21 Keeping the Faith
22 Opium of the People
23 Culture Wars
24 The Curse of Corruption
25 The Shrinking Sea
26 The Wasteland
27 The Ranch
28 The Slumbering Steppe
29 The Collective Farm
Notes Bibliography Acknowledgements Index