The Zhivago Affair: The Kremlin, the CIA, and the Battle Over a Forbidden Book

Front Cover
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2015 M04 28 - 384 pages

The Zhivago Affair is the dramatic, never-before-told story—drawing on newly declassified files—of how a forbidden book became a secret CIA weapon in the ideological battle between East and West.

In May 1956, an Italian publishing scout went to a village outside Moscow to visit Russia’s greatest living poet, Boris Pasternak. He left carrying the manuscript of Pasternak’s only novel, suppressed by Soviet authorities. From there the life of this extraordinary book entered the realm of the spy novel. The CIA published a Russian-language edition of Doctor Zhivago and smuggled it into the Soviet Union. Copies were devoured in Moscow and Leningrad, sold on the black market, and passed from friend to friend. Pasternak’s funeral in 1960 was attended by thousands who defied their government to bid him farewell, and his example launched the great tradition of the Soviet writer-dissident. First to obtain CIA files providing proof of the agency’s involvement, Peter Finn and Petra Couvée take us back to a remarkable Cold War era when literature had the power to stir the world.

(With 8 pages of black-and-white illustrations.)

 

Contents

Prologue
3
Afterword
263
A Note on Sources
271
Not to publish a novel like this would constitute a crime against culture
280
Chapter 8
294

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About the author (2015)

Peter Finn is National Security Editor for The Washington Post and previously served as the Post’s bureau chief in Moscow.
 
Petra Couvée is a writer and translator and teaches at Saint Petersburg State University.

The Zhivago Affair is their first collaboration together.

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