Lennart Meri (1929-2006) was a traveller, writer and documentary filmmaker, and Estonian president from 1992 to 2001. His father being a diplomat, he was schooled in Paris and Berlin. When the Soviet Union occupied Estonia in 1940, his family was first imprisoned, then deported to Siberia; they survived against all odds, and returned after the Second World War. Meri strove relentlessly to articulate and defend Soviet-occupied Estonia's interests, and worked to restore the nation's sovereignty. His ten books and six ethnological films had an impact echoing across the Iron Curtain. On publication in 1976, Silverwhite quickly became a popular and central work of Estonian literature. Adam Cullen (b. 1986) is a poet and translator of Estonian literature into English. His translation of Martin Algus's short story 'The Lion', adapted as a radio play and broadcast on BBC Radio 4, earned a special commendation for Prix Europa's 'Best European Radio Fiction of the Year' (2022), and won the BBC Audio Drama Award for Best European Drama. His translation of Kai Aareleid's novelBurning Citieswas longlisted for the 2020 Dublin Literary Award. Originally from Minnesota, Cullen has lived in Estonia since 2007.
'In Silverwhite Lennart Meri moves along the thin line between history, myth and science, his extraordinary sensitivity oscillates between a deep knowledge of the classics, myths, folklore, geography and toponymy, linguistics and navigation, and an analytical capacity between the deductive and the speculative. The result is surprising intuitions supported by a deep and rigorous analysis.' -- <b>Antonello Biagini, historian of Eastern Europe, and former Vice-Rector for General Affairs, Sapienza University of Rome</b> 'Lennart Meri's magnificent travelogue of the North bridges ancient poetry with the distant past and exact sciences. Let modern readers enjoy these imaginary voyages with the same passion as those who first discovered them almost fifty years ago.ʼ -- <b>Jüri Kivimäe, University of Toronto, and author of <I>Aspects of Daily Life in Medieval Estonia</I> and <I>Tallinn in Flames: Soviet Air-Raids on Tallinn, March 1944</I></b> 'Silverwhite is Lennart Meri's lyrical expression of the essence of Estonian identity and history--the inspiration for himself as the country's first post-Soviet President and for his country as it brilliantly asserts its right to exist in the most challenging of circumstances--escaping the constricting trammels of the Soviet mindset.' -- <b>The Rt Hon Charles Clarke, former MP, and editor of <I>Understanding the Baltic States</I></b>