Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
Samovars and blintzes
JOHN GREEN yearns for the real-life stories behind a fairy-tale photobook of rural Russian life
Vika Ivanova (cover), 2009; Liza Vysotskaya on Epiphany, 2019 [Nadia Sablin]

Years like water
By Nadia Sablin
Dewi Lewis Publishing, £35.00

THE Russian-born photographer Nadia Sablin (born in 1980) grew up in the small village of Alekhovshchina, north-west of St Petersburg in the then Soviet Union. She and her family left in 1992, fleeing the “lawlessness and violence” unleashed by the collapse of the Soviet Union and the onset of wild-west capitalism, to settle in the US.

Sablin returned to the village in 2008 and for the following decade documented the life of the people. She says that immediately: “I felt a connection with the world of my childhood. And when I walked into the house my grandfather built with hand-hewn logs, the tight knot which had been constricting my chest began loosening. The house smelled of pinecones burning in the samovar and my auntie’s blintzes. 

“It was a magical experience, this transport to a different time, and it was steeped in memories of stories, both real and imagined... Still, I missed it, even as I learned to fear it from my new home in the West. I missed the smell of linden trees in our courtyard after rain, and the sound a train makes on the tracks, and the angle of the light.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
fotw
Film of the Week / 7 August 2025
7 August 2025

JOHN GREEN recommends an Argentinian film classic on re-release - a deliciously cynical tale of swindling and double-cross

earthquakes
Books / 18 July 2025
18 July 2025

JOHN GREEN is fascinated by a very readable account of Britain’s involvement in South America

metamorf
Exhibition review / 16 July 2025
16 July 2025

JOHN GREEN is stirred by an ambitious art project that explores solidarity and the shared memory of occupation

PARRIQUE
Books / 20 June 2025
20 June 2025

JOHN GREEN applauds an excellent and accessible demonstration that the capitalist economy is the biggest threat to our existence

Similar stories
CONTESTED HISTORY: The Neue Wache (“the New Watchhouse”) was rebuilt by the GDR in 1957 and reopened in 1960 as a Memorial to the Victims of Fascism and Militarism — then, in 1993, it was rededicated to the ‘victims of war and tyranny’
Features / 26 May 2025
26 May 2025

JOHN GREEN observes how Berlin’s transformation from socialist aspiration to imperial nostalgia mirrors Germany’s dangerous trajectory under Chancellor Merz — a BlackRock millionaire and anti-communist preparing for a new war with Russia

migrants
Exhibition Review / 9 May 2025
9 May 2025

JAMES WALSH is moved by an exhibition of graphic art that relates horrors that would be much less immediate in other media

Israeli soldiers entering Madama for a raid in October 2024
Features / 29 November 2024
29 November 2024
JENNY KASSMAN details how Israeli military raids, settler violence and harvest obstruction are devastating Palestinian communities during the 2024 olive harvest as the world turns a blind eye
Police and demonstrators with a bus parked on London Bridge
Books / 22 November 2024
22 November 2024
JONATHAN TAYLOR is entranced by a collection that touches themes of homelessness, loneliness and abuse with dream-like imagery