

Within The Whirlwind
Edition: 1st english ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
A harrowing and deeply personal memoir, Within the Whirlwind chronicles the second volume of Soviet journalist and writer Eugenia Ginzburg's survival through Stalin's brutal labor camp system, picking up where her first memoir, Journey into the Whirlwind, left off. With unflinching honesty and remarkable literary grace, Ginzburg details her years in the Kolyma camps of Siberia, her work as a nurse, and the enduring human connections — including a profound love story — that sustained her spirit against unimaginable odds. Written with a tone that balances quiet resilience with searing moral clarity, the narrative illustrates how the human capacity for compassion and intellectual life persisted even within the machinery of totalitarian oppression. Ginzburg's account stands as one of the most powerful testimonies of the Gulag era, a work that bears witness not only to suffering but to the stubborn persistence of dignity and hope.
Original: $20.31
-65%$20.31
$7.11Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Edition: 1st english ed.,
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Wear and tear
Pages: Good
Markings: No markings
A harrowing and deeply personal memoir, Within the Whirlwind chronicles the second volume of Soviet journalist and writer Eugenia Ginzburg's survival through Stalin's brutal labor camp system, picking up where her first memoir, Journey into the Whirlwind, left off. With unflinching honesty and remarkable literary grace, Ginzburg details her years in the Kolyma camps of Siberia, her work as a nurse, and the enduring human connections — including a profound love story — that sustained her spirit against unimaginable odds. Written with a tone that balances quiet resilience with searing moral clarity, the narrative illustrates how the human capacity for compassion and intellectual life persisted even within the machinery of totalitarian oppression. Ginzburg's account stands as one of the most powerful testimonies of the Gulag era, a work that bears witness not only to suffering but to the stubborn persistence of dignity and hope.











