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Book review: Red Sky at Noon by Simon Sebag Montefiore

Monica Porter salutes an ex-colleague's Moscow-set novel

August 9, 2017 14:32
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1 min read

I well remember Simon Sebag Montefiore from our briefly overlapping time as colleagues at the Daily Mail in the 1990s. Affable and polished, he had a fixation with all things Russian, and his shtick (which amused us all in the office) was to lope around in a Red Army greatcoat.

In the years since then, he has emerged as an authoritative, award-winning historian, and the biographer of Stalin. And, as well as his enduring fascination with Russian history, this scion of an illustrious British Sephardi family (his great-great-uncle was the financier and philanthropist Sir Moses Montefiore) is equally engaged by his Jewish roots. He combines the two in Red Sky at Noon, the final novel in his Moscow Trilogy.

The story is set during summer 1942, when Hitler launched his “Case Blue” offensive across Ukraine and the plains of southern Russia towards the Don and Volga rivers, and on towards the prize of Stalingrad.

As tanks were in short supply, both the German and Soviet sides deployed cavalries instead. With the Soviets suffering heavy losses, Stalin called upon an additional human resource, the wretched and expendable prisoners of the gulags, to form penal battalions (called shtrafbats). They could “win redemption” by spilling blood — their own as well as the enemy’s — for the Motherland.