Sophie Pinkham is a writer specialising in Soviet and post-Soviet culture, history and politics. She is Professor of Practice in the Comparative Literature Department at Cornell University. Her story for the Economist 1843, ‘Lost in a Dark Wood’, on migrants in the forest on the Belarusian-Polish border, was awarded a 2023 British Journalism Award. Her writing has appeared in The New York Review of Books, New York Times, Guardian, New Yorker, Foreign Affairs, London Review of Books, Foreign Policy, Archaeology, and The Paris Review, among other places. Her first book, Black Square: Adventures in Post-Soviet Ukraine, was published in 2016.
‘Strikingly original … a clever way to retell Russian history from a new and revealing perspective’ The Times ‘Fascinating… the book makes a compelling argument for the forest as a prism through which to understand Russia – including the former Soviet space – and its peoples’ Guardian 'To tell Russia's story through its forests, from the ent-like leshy of medieval folklore to the way Ukraine's forests became bastions of defence against Putin's invasion, is a glorious act of imagination, and Sophie Pinkham's wonderful book is packed with insight to match' Mark Galeotti, author of A Short History of Russia 'For Sophie Pinkham, Russia’s forests contain everything: animals and spirits, legends and fairytales, seeds of the world’s greatest novels, whole histories of political repression and revolution, and hope for a radically post-national future. The Oak and the Larch is a towering achievement, a work of remarkable synthesis and sensitive storytelling' Merve Emre, author of The Personality Brokers 'Perceptive, wide-ranging, and gracefully written, The Oak and the Larch is a momentous chronicle of Russia’s vast and vital woodlands and their agency in a human history that touches us all. The lessons we follow from this sylvan past– and this book– will determine our future on Earth' Jack E. Davis, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Gulf 'The forest has been friend and enemy, sanctuary and prison, zone of industry and realm of the spirit. Sophie Pinkham gives us not just a new way to see Russian history but an unexpected source of inspiration for renewing our own relationship with the natural world' Ben Tarnoff, author of Internet for the People 'Sophie Pinkham’s book, drawing on a range of disciplines, from history to folklore, ecology to economics, and written with sophistication and wit, presents Russia and its empires in a dramatically new light. A revelation that entertains as much as it enlightens' Douglas Smith, author of Former People