The Special military operation conducted by Russian troops in neighbouring Ukraine has pushed Russians into a complex situation that majority have never experienced- the war times.
With such a complex war time situation, many do not know how to adjust especially when the economy begins biting hard, mass mobilisation of youths into the army and a host of other challenges.
The most quick answer is turning to existing literature both based on fiction and true stories especially on the country’s past.
George Orwell’s “1984”a dystopian classic has earned the distinction of being the most stolen book from the shelves of Russia’s Chitai-Gorod bookstore chain in 2023.
This book which has been stolen 460 times is among the top 10 most-purchased books from the chain this year, the company said in a press release cited by the RBC news website.
In “1984,” the totalitarian government uses surveillance, propaganda and paradoxical slogans like “War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, and Ignorance is Strength” to maintain control over the population.
Masha Karp, author of the book “George Orwell and Russia,” has likened the novel’s fictional nation of Oceania to wartime Russia, where “the word ‘war’ was instantly banned and ordered to be replaced, on pain of prosecution, by the phrase ‘a special military operation’.”
While sales of the novel in Russia jumped following the February 2022 invasion, it has been one of the country’s top sellers since at least 2010.
Despite its widespread availability, two people who distributed free copies in Moscow in March 2022 were detained and charged with discrediting the Russian army.
In total, almost 300,000 books were stolen from Chitai-Gorod in 2023, down 10% from 2022.
This year’s most-stolen nonfiction book was “Loneliness Vaccine: Stories to Fix the Brain,” by mental health blogger Nika Nabokova.
Other commonly stolen items included school books for children, books on raising children, and collections of fairy tales.