Praise for Blood of Others:

“In his introduction to Blood of Others, Rory Finnin writes that he aims to ‘realign our intellectual horizons,’ to refocus our attention on the cultural crossroads that is the Black Sea. He succeeds: using Russian, Ukrainian, Tatar, and Turkish sources, and with the tragic history of the Crimean Tatars as his focus, he shows how writers in the region influenced and enhanced one another’s work. A brilliant book by the UK’s most important scholar of Ukraine.”

Anne Applebaum, Staff Writer, The Atlantic, Senior Fellow, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Gulag: A History and Red Famine: Stalin’s War on Ukraine

“Rory Finnin has written the definitive account of cultural responses to a stillhidden atrocity: the deportation of the Crimean Tatars. Through new research and sensitive interpretations, Blood of Others shows how the Crimean Tatar experience is deeply connected to global themes of colonialism, dispossession, and survival. It is a record of cultural resilience against astounding odds and a detailed portrait of art and memory in action.”

Charles King, Professor of International Affairs and Government, Georgetown University, and author of The Black Sea: A History

Blood of Others is an astonishing account of the entanglement of Russian, Crimean Tatar, Turkish, and Ukrainian cultural life with the political and social history of the Crimean Tatars. Rory Finnin’s work is an impressive navigation among the languages and religious confessions of the Black Sea region, cultural works from poetry to film, centuries of imperial domination, and methodological toolkits, revealing the historical effects and ethical burdens of cultural expression in a fraught, multiply colonized territory.”

Kevin M.F. Platt, Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Professor in the Humanities, University of Pennsylvania, and editor of Global Russian Cultures

“In this thoughtful, nuanced study of the literature of Crimea, Rory Finnin exposes the seams connecting the nations and empires that have coexisted in the Black Sea. Blood of Others fills a significant lacuna in English-language scholarship on Eurasian history and literature.”

Amelia Glaser, Associate Professor of Literature and Endowed Chair in Judaic Studies, University of California San Diego, and author of Jews and Ukrainians in Russia’s Literary Borderlands: From the Shtetl Fair to the Petersburg Bookshop