
There is something fascinating about Russia. For so long hidden behind the ‘iron curtain’, the world’s largest nation (geographically speaking) is an enigma, a private, pariah state. Indeed, for an entity so colossal it seems odd that our impressions in the west are largely forged by the dominant presence on the international stage of Vladimir Putin and a few oligarchs drifting around the world in super yachts, buying up football teams and the most expensive property in vulgar, ostentatious displays of wealth. However, we also know that in its cultural heyday, Mother Russia has contributed some of the most profound works of literature, music, art, philosophy and dance, the world has ever witnessed. Still, the country that gave us Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Tchaikovsky, Chagall and Nureyev has also cultivated an important line of dissident figures: Solzhenitsyn, Sakharov, Nemtsov and most recently Alexei Navalny.
This compelling biography is Navalny’s life in his own words. New York Times bestseller, Sunday Times bestseller, British book awards 2025, the international accolades all the more remarkable, when the reader remembers the poisoning of the author in 2020 by the Russian security services. It was a global event, in the wake of which, Navalny began to write. Once recovered that he was driven to return to his homeland, in spite of the consequences, is a measure of the man and the book includes his prison diaries, published here for the first time. In 2024 Navalny died in a brutal Siberian prison. Yet, this book is remarkably uplifting and speaks to the spirit of a man unwilling to be silenced, unwilling to look the other way, determined to challenge the corruption that he believed has blighted his nation.
“The only moments in our lives that count for anything are those when we do the right thing, when we don’t have to look down at the table but can raise our heads and can look each other in the eye. Nothing else matters.”
I listened to the audiobook version (which I had reserved on ‘Borrowbox’ and it was well worth the wait), narrated superbly by Matthew Goode. 16 hours, 47 minutes. Harrowing at times, bleak and at the same time absorbing, unfailingly positive and to my surprise, inspirational.
I immersed myself in ‘Patriot’ soon after ‘Politics on the Edge’ by Rory Stewart and while I was struck by the courage of the British politician, Navalny assumed the status of a different order. Few men (or women), in my lifetime, have reached genuine ‘hero’ status – Mandela; Obama; Churchill; but I am now minded to add Navalny! Perhaps, we can still count on Russia to fascinate… and to horrify at times, but even in adversity, we may also find voices to amplify and admire. This posthumous critique of contemporary Russia, is a fine example, from a self-confessed patriot.