Available Formats
Moscow Underground
By (Author) Catherine Merridale
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
30th July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Historical fiction
Narrative theme: Politics
War, combat and military adventure fiction
Political oppression and persecution
Social and cultural history
Paperback
289
Width 135mm, Height 216mm, Spine 18mm
270g
Moscow, 1934. Construction is well under way for a glittering new subway system in the Russian capital. When completed, it will be the envy of the world. However, to build the future, the authorities must dig up the past. Untold treasures and dark secrets lie deep underground.
Anton Belkin is an Investigator at the Procuracy, a sensitive job at a dangerous moment on the road to the Show Trials. He is also someone who needs to keep his head down. His artist father was once the darling of the revolutionary avant-garde, a painter whose work could inspire devotion and great sacrifice. Now older and more cynical, he is one careless word away from disgrace and Stalin's Gulag.
Then Anton is dragged into a murder case by his former lover, Vika, who has become a powerful member of the secret police. A prominent archaeologist, working alongside the subway dig, has been killed in a deserted mansion. Accused is a young boy, a nobody. Though Anton does not want to get involved in any way, Vika browbeats him into paying a visit to the site. What he finds there is puzzling and makes him feel for the boy. While Vika tracks his every move, he is also forced to reconsider their shared history and the bonds that still bind him to her.
All reason tells him that he should just leave the boy to rot in gaol. The revolution has already claimed plenty of other innocents. As he digs deeper though, something about the mystery compels Anton to find the truth.
Something bigger is at work here. Something that links a thousand-year-old treasure and a vicious internecine fight for power in the young Soviet state. Anton must navigate his way through and ultimately keep himself and his family safe.
Merridale's book is a sweeping novel of life, death and politics set in a society on the brink of the first of Stalins great purges. Somewhere between Child 44, Gorky Park and The Holy Thief, it is a novel of special power.
PRAISE FOR LENIN ON THE TRAIN:
THE TIMES, THE FINANCIAL TIMES AND ECONOMIST BOOKS OF THE YEAR 2016
'Twice I missed my stop on the Tube reading this book this is a jewel among histories' David Aaronovitch, The Times
'The suberb, funny, fascinating story of Lenin's trans-European rail journey to power and how it shook the world' Simon Sebag Montefiore, Evening Standard
'A brisk and often witty overview for the lay reader of the circumstances leading up to the February and October revolutions' Helen Rappaport, Sunday Times
'With the 100th anniversary of the two Russian revolutions of 1917 around the corner surely no author will give a better account than Merridale of how, in that fateful year, Lenin made his way with German help from exile in Switzerland to Russia' Financial Times
Catherine Merridale is an award-winning writer and broadcaster with an internationally acknowledged expertise in Russia and the former Soviet Union. A pioneer of oral history in the region, her first major book, Night of Stone (Granta, 2000), won the Royal Society of Literature's Heinemann Prize and was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2001. More recently, Red Fortress: The Secret Heart of Russia's History (Allen Lane, 2013) won both the Wolfson History Prize and the Pushkin House Russian Book Prize in 2014. Ivan's War (Faber, 2005) tells the stories of ordinary Red Army soldiers in Europe's last great land-based war, while Lenin on the Train (Allen Lane, 2016) tracks Europe's collective and bungling responsibility for the Great October Revolution.