Mikhail Khodorkovsky has held various interviews with media outlets where one can discern what his intentions for his future as a free man will be. His most recent meeting with The Guardian offers advice even the non-persecuted should bear in mind, “Prison taught me that time does not have as much significance as we think. Just because something didn’t happen today doesn’t mean it won’t happen tomorrow.” There is no doubt that Khodorkovsky is a man with a plan filled with enough vigor for life that he will actualize them to the best of his ability. An article published by the Financial Times discloses that he holds a personal responsibility to Russia and is willing to take the mantle of “crisis manager” as an interim president of sorts in order to see a gradual change in the political environment. Moreover, in an interview with Bloomberg, Khodorkovsky presents an option for the ruling power of Russia to cede power in order to ensure both sides safely continue to exist-- thus preventing either one from wreaking havoc on the other.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
MY FELLOW PRISONERS
Mikhail Khodorkovsky has held various interviews with media outlets where one can discern what his intentions for his future as a free man will be. His most recent meeting with The Guardian offers advice even the non-persecuted should bear in mind, “Prison taught me that time does not have as much significance as we think. Just because something didn’t happen today doesn’t mean it won’t happen tomorrow.” There is no doubt that Khodorkovsky is a man with a plan filled with enough vigor for life that he will actualize them to the best of his ability. An article published by the Financial Times discloses that he holds a personal responsibility to Russia and is willing to take the mantle of “crisis manager” as an interim president of sorts in order to see a gradual change in the political environment. Moreover, in an interview with Bloomberg, Khodorkovsky presents an option for the ruling power of Russia to cede power in order to ensure both sides safely continue to exist-- thus preventing either one from wreaking havoc on the other.
Monday, July 16, 2012
Max Frei Returns with The Stranger's Magic

First published in Russia more than fifteen years ago, Frei's Labyrinths of Echo series has since become a bestselling international phenomena, infusing highly philosophical comic fantasy with extraordinary wit. Plunging back into the enchanted parallel world of Echo originally portrayed in The Stranger and The Stranger's Woes, twenty-something eponymous anti-hero and self-described loser "Sir Max" returns in The Stranger's Magic, the smash hit series that has sold more than two million copies across the globe.
An unlikely protagonist, Max Frei is a social outcast,a gluttonous loafer, and a hardened smoker who sleeps away his days until he finds himself transplanted to a magical world where he possesses powerful supernatural abilities. As a "Nocturnal Representative of the Most Venerable Head of the Minor Secret Investigative Force of the City of Echo," Sir Max investigates cases more complicated, extravagant, and dangerous than ever in The Stranger's Magicas he battles illegal magic and combats trespassing monsters from alternate realities. Joined by a returning cast of crime fighting companions including the omniscient Sir Juffin Hully, the uproarious Sir Manga Melifaro, and the beautiful Lady Melamori Blimm, Sir Max and his friends tackle extraordinary capers including palace coups, attempted murders, and bungled burglaries.
Appropriate for first time visitors to Echo and diehard fans alike, The Stranger's Magic blends a complex web of clues with a cast of unforgettable characters, offering an unequaled fantasy epic for a new century.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Available Today: RUSSIA: A 1,000-Year Chronicle of the Wild East by Martin Sixsmith

During the summer of 1991, a hard-line coup against reformist president Mikhail Gorbachev was undermined, as ordinary Russians protested in the streets to defend democracy and Boris Yeltsin famously mounted a Soviet tank to join the resistance movement. In the aftermath of the failed August coup and the eventual dissolution of the Communist Party, citizens of the world anxiously awaited Russia’s transition to a Western-style market democracy, only to be disappointed by runaway inflation, ethnic violence, and rampant political corruption.
More than twenty years later, Prime Minister and President-elect Vladimir Putin is facing the largest civil protests since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Russia looks at the events of 1991 and places them within the broadest historical context, highlighting the previous turning points in more than a thousand years of Russian history when the nation could have gone either way—down the path of reform and liberal democracy or totalitarian rule and autocracy. With decades of experience reporting for the BBC in Eastern Europe, Sixsmith settles the score in this accurate and engrossing story of Russia’s path, skillfully tracing the conundrums of contemporary Russia to their roots in its troubled past.
Martin Sixsmith recently contributed an original piece to the Los Angeles Review of Books on Russia’s “New Times of Trouble” and was profiled by Russian daily Rossiyskaya Gazeta’s supplement Russia Beyond the Headlines. To celebrate the release of Russia, we’re giving away one copy to a randomly selected subscriber to the blog. We’ll be drawing a winner tomorrow afternoon at 5pm (EST), so you still have twenty four hours to sign up for your chance to win.
Advance Praise for RUSSIA:
“Russia, a 1,000 Year Chronicle of the Wild East has all the ingredients to become the leading popular history of Russia. Colloquial, personal and anecdotal in style … well researched and factually sound.”
– The Times Literary Supplement
“Sixsmith exemplifies good storytelling. He writes with the cadence and comfort of a professional talker and all of Russian history seems to earn his complete interest.” – ForeWord Reviews
“Twenty years after the U.S.S.R.’s collapse, Russia remains a world-class power, and former BBC Moscow correspondent Sixsmith delivers a thoroughly satisfying history.” – Publishers Weekly
“Whip-smart … a compelling look at Russian history by a practiced Russia hand.” – Kirkus Reviews
“Sixsmith, formerly a BBC television reporter posted in Russia, immerses readers in the Russian landscape and peoples with descriptions of places he’s visited and quotations of poetry.” – Booklist
“Martin Sixsmith has put his experience as a longstanding reporter in Moscow for the BBC to very good use in this engagingly written account of Russia’s conflicted history.” – History Book Club
“Among the many contemporary books about Russia, general readers are likely to choose Sixsmith’s 600-page tome for its comprehensiveness and air of authority. As popular history, it is enjoyable and engaging.” – Russia Beyond the Headlines