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Once Upon a Time in Russia

The Rise of the Oligarchs—A True Story of Ambition, Wealth, Betrayal, and Murder

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The New York Times bestselling author of Bringing Down the House and The Accidental Billionaires tells his most incredible story yet: A true drama of obscene wealth, crime, rivalry, and betrayal from deep inside the world of billionaire Russian oligarchs that Booklist called "one more example of just how talented a storyteller [Mezrich] is."
Meet two larger-than-life Russians: former mathematician Boris Berezovsky, who moved into more lucrative ventures as well as politics, becoming known as the Godfather of the Kremlin; and Roman Abramovich, a dashing young entrepreneur who built one of Russia's largest oil companies from the ground up.

After a chance meeting on a yacht in the Caribbean, the men became locked in a complex partnership, surfing the waves of privatization after the fall of the Soviet regime and amassing mega fortunes while also taking the reins of power in Russia. With Berezovsky serving as the younger entrepreneur's krysha—literally, his roof, his protector—they battled their way through the "Wild East" of Russia until their relationship soured when Berezovsky attacked President Vladimir Putin in the media. Dead bodies trailed Berezovsky as he escaped to London, where an associate died painfully of Polonium poisoning, creating an international furor. As Abramovich prospered, Berezovsky was found dead in a luxurious London town house, declared a suicide.

With unprecedented, exclusive first-person sourcing, Mezrich takes us inside a world of unimaginable wealth, power, and corruption to uncover this exciting story, a true-life thriller epic for our time—"Wolf Hall on the Moskva" (Bookpage).
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 2, 2015
      Mezrich aims to repeat the success of 2009’s The Accidental Billionaires—the basis for the movie The Social Network—with this breathless account of two billionaire oligarchs in post-Communist Russia. In the feeding frenzy after the Soviet Union’s 1991 collapse, venal businessmen grew rich as the bankrupt government sold state-owned companies at fire-sale prices. Boris Berezovsky, an early beneficiary of the sell-off, recognized talent in Roman Abramovich, a younger entrepreneur, and became his krysha (protector). Both flourished until Vladimir Putin became premier in 1999. Berezovsky underestimated Putin’s desire to eliminate the influence—thought not the wealth—of the oligarchs. They quarreled; Putin attacked Berezovsky, drove him into exile, and may have had him (and at least one associate, Alexander Litvinenko) murdered. Abramovich, who proved more amenable to working with Putin, continues to prosper. This is lowbrow journalism at its best: recreated dialogue, the author’s insight into everyone’s thoughts, characters and actions tweaked to protect sources and maintain a fiercely cinematic pace. Nevertheless, the bizarre events described in the book happened more or less as described, and between the action sequences, Mezrich, almost as if by accident, reveals the sad story of how Russian resources and infrastructure were looted by the fortunate few. Agent: Eric Simonoff, William Morris Endeavor.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      Mezrich (The Accidental Billionaires) aims to shed light on the mystery of contemporary Russia by focusing here on the oligarchs who profited from the "privatization" of state assets after the demise of the Soviet Union in 1991. The author pays particular attention to businessman Boris Berezovsky (1946-2013) and his associates. We follow Berezovsky's rise and prodigious financial successes to his exile in the UK and his eventual mysterious demise. This is a tale of skullduggery and chicanery if ever there was one. One of the more informative and sinister aspects of the tale is the relationship of the oligarchs to Vladimir Putin. Mezrich provides a biographical sketch of the Russian president and his ascent to the pinnacle of power and then his moves to rein in the oligarchs. Along the way, the author highlights the corrupt and lawless state that Russia has become today. VERDICT This sensationalist though useful account sometimes veers into the coarse and crude. Ideal for readers of Russian history who enjoy an edge-of-your-seat delivery, and especially timely after the assassination of Putin opposition leader Boris Nemtsov.--Edward B. Cone, New York

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2015
      Mezrich (The Accidental Billionaires, 2009) turns his keen journalistic eye to Russia in the early 1990s. The socialist state had collapsed, and the door was wide open for capitalism to transform the country. The problem was, Russia was a country full of people who had no idea how to be capitalists. As the country underwent a massive political and economic upheaval, a new societal class emerged: the oligarchs, Russians who used the new economic freedoms (not to mention the almost complete lack of governmental oversight) to become fabulously, spectacularly rich. Mezrich focuses on two such men, a mentor and his young protege, who accumulated staggering wealth before personal differences tore their relationship apart. One man went on to continued prosperity; the other met a tragic end. Mezrich's ability to tell a true (and well-documented) story, in a way that makes it look and feel like the most involving of narratives, is nearly unparalleled. He is one of the few writers whose name on a piece of nonfiction guarantees not only quality but also interest, no matter the subject, and this fine book is one more example of just how talented a storyteller he is.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 31, 2015
      Voice actor Bobb’s calm and leveled reading anchors this nearly unbelievable but true story of the swift rise to—and eventual fall from—power and wealth of two billionaire oligarchs in post-Communist Russia. In the feeding frenzy after the Soviet Union’s 1991 collapse, venal businessmen grew rich as the bankrupt government sold state-owned companies at fire-sale prices. Boris Berezovsky, a one-time academic and used-car salesman, was an early beneficiary and mentor to Roman Abramovich, a talented young entrepreneur. Both flourished until Vladimir Putin became premier in 1999. Along the way are attempted assassinations, bombings, murders, and corruption. Given the over-the-top events depicted in the book, Bobb makes the perfect choice of reading in the manner of a detached reporter. He allows the material to dominate the reading without attempting to embellish or grandstand with accents or dramatizations. The story speaks for itself in this solid audio edition. An Atria hardcover.

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