
Once Upon a Russia: Voices From a Vanished Era gathers over one hundred vivid, personal accounts from foreigners who lived, worked, or wandered through Russia during a time that now feels irretrievably past. Edited by Steven A. Fisher, who shared that journey with the contributors, this anthology captures not only the country's strange beauty and contradictions, but the emotional imprint it left on those who experienced it.
From diplomats and dreamers to journalists, bankers, artists, and students, each voice offers a unique window into the texture of Russian life-its unpredictable rhythms, ironies, absurdities, and quiet truths. These are not attempts to explain Russia, but acts of remembering: a kitchen table conversation, a snow-lit street, a baffling official exchange, a toast made in joy or defiance.
Poignant, humorous, and deeply human, these reflections reveal a country both maddening and magnetic-where memory and meaning continue to blur and where hope and disillusion live side by side. For those who were there, this book may feel like a reunion. For others, it offers rare insight into a vanished world that once marked them-and may yet mark you.
"Steve Fisher has compiled a fascinating collection of reflections. Through varied perspectives, the book offers a compelling glimpse of a Russia filled with both hope and hurt after the demise of the Soviet Union. Its stories and insights caution us neither to give in to Putin's brutal autocracy nor give up on what's possible for Russians in the decades ahead."
-Bill Burns, former U.S. ambassador to Russia, deputy secretary of state, and director of the CIA.
"This priceless volume captures history in the words of those who lived it. It places a human face on pivotal events and reveals insights that rarely find their way into history books."
-Michael Khodarkovsky, professor of history at Loyola University Chicago, and the author of several books, most recently Russia's 20th Century: A Journey in 100 Histories.
"Imagine leafing through an old photo album, with those in the pictures gathered around you, eager to share their first encounters with Russia - dramatic, sentimental, funny, absurd, wild, or scary. As with any old album, the experience is bittersweet. Here, though, the sadness runs deeper: the Russia of their recollections, a country opening up and welcoming Westerners, is a Russia that no longer exists."
-Maria Lipman, Russian journalist and expert on Russia; former editor of various Russian- and English-language publications and former opinion writer for The Washington Post and The New Yorker.