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Martin Sixsmith

    September 24, 1954

    This British author and journalist gained renown for his reporting from pivotal moments of the late Cold War, covering Moscow and Poland. His extensive experience abroad shaped his perspective on politics and society, which is reflected in his works. He later moved into political communications and public service, experiencing significant public attention. Following his departure from government, he turned to writing, producing novels with political themes and acclaimed non-fiction that explores human experiences and societal issues.

    Martin Sixsmith
    Putin's oil. The Yukos Affair and The Struggle For Russia
    The Litvinenko File
    Russia: A 1,000-year Chronicle of the Wild East
    The Lost Child of Philomena Lee
    The War of Nerves
    An Unquiet Heart
    • 2024

      During the darkest days of WW2, in her home country of Holland, Anna-Maria van der Vaart sheltered Allied pilots, gave refuge to persecuted Jews and stood up to the Nazis by participating in audacious acts of resistance. This is Anna- Maria’s remarkable story alongside those who risked their lives to save others.

      My Sins Go With Me
    • 2024

      An original and informative look at the character of Russian leaders throughout history and why they think so differently to the rest of the world. Martin Sixsmith, acknowledged expert on Russia, history and politics argues that it is impossible to understand Vladimir Putin unless he is seen in the wider context of Russian history. All the forces that condition Putin's behaviour, his attitude to the outside world, his desire for political domination and his unrelenting brutality can be traced from Muscovy, Boris Godunov, Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Great, Stalin and right up to the present day. In other words, there is a mindset, the psyche of Russian dictators which has changed little since early days. The terror of encirclement and of invasion by outsiders. Obsessive cruelty and wilful lack of concern for the loss of human life - Stalin sacrificed the lives of millions of Russians to drive back Hitler's troops. A complete lack of concern for what outsiders may think of Russia. The sanctification of the concept of Holy Russia, Mother Russia where the Russian Orthodox Church is too often manipulated by the State to condone the mindless butchery of human beings in the pursuit of an end and purpose which it justified. Nowhere are these factors more obvious than in the present Russian invasion of Ukraine, which thanks to this book, we will understand a great deal better.

      Putin and the Return of History
    • 2021

      A major new history of the Cold War: exploring the conflict through the minds of the people who lived it.

      The War of Nerves
    • 2019

      An Unquiet Heart

      • 640 pages
      • 23 hours of reading

      Bursting with the real-life drama of love in turbulent times, An Unquiet Heart is a magnificently wrought novel of passion and violence, triumph and tragedy.

      An Unquiet Heart
    • 2017

      From the author of the bestselling Philomena, Ayesha's Gift is the story of a young British woman, born in Pakistan, whose life is thrown into turmoil by the violent murder of her father

      Ayesha's Gift
    • 2013

      Philomena

      A mother, her son and a fifty-year search

      • 464 pages
      • 17 hours of reading
      3.5(1816)Add rating

      "When she became pregnant as a teenager in Ireland in 1952, Philomena Lee was sent to a convent to be looked after as a "fallen woman." Then the nuns took her baby from her and sold him, like thousands of others, to America for adoption. Fifty years later, Philomena decided to find him. Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, Philomena's son was trying to find her. Renamed Michael Hess, he had become a leading lawyer in the first Bush administration, and he struggled to hide secrets that would jeopardize his career in the Republican Party and endanger his quest to find his mother. A gripping exposâe told with novelistic intrigue, Philomena pulls back the curtain on the role of the Catholic Church in forced adoptions and on the love between a mother and son who endured a lifelong separation."--

      Philomena
    • 2011

      Russia is a country of contradictions: a nation of cultural refinement and artistic originality and yet also a country that rules by 'the iron fist', with an ingrained eagerness to sacrifice the individual for the collectivist cause. This title shows how Russia's complex identity has been formed over a thousand years.

      Russia: A 1,000-year Chronicle of the Wild East
    • 2010

      This title investigates Vladimir Putin's war for control of Russia's vast oil reserves, in particular Mikhail Khodorkovsky's oil firm, Yukos. "Putin's Oil" investigates the complex world of Kremlin politics, including conspiracies and conspiracy theories, allegations that Roman Abramovitch plotted with Putin to destroy Khodorkovsky, suspicions of betrayal and double agents in the Kremlin and in Yukos, murder charges against Khodorkovsky's partners, and the KGB defector who claims they were carried out by Kremlin agents. After the mysterious death in a helicopter crash of the Englishman who had taken over Yukos, the company's war against the Kremlin is now being waged by a troika of mild mannered Britons, pursued by Interpol arrest warrants and Moscow's fury. Khodorkovsky remains in a penal camp in far Eastern Siberia. Martin Sixsmith, former BBC Moscow Correspondent, has gained unprecedented access to many of the players in the drama. The resulting book is both a thriller and an analysis of the defining moments of Putin's presidency and their ongoing impact in Russian and world politics.

      Putin's oil. The Yukos Affair and The Struggle For Russia
    • 2010