Home
Only One Year: A Memoir
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
Only One Year: A Memoir in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99

Barnes and Noble
Only One Year: A Memoir in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
“Among the great Russian autobiographical works: Herzen, Kropotkin, Tolstoy’s
Confession
.” —Edmund Wilson,
The New Yorker
After the success of her
New York Times
bestselling childhood memoir
Twenty Letters to a Friend
, Josef Stalin’s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva—subject of Rosemary Sullivan’s critically acclaimed biography
Stalin’s Daughter
—penned this riveting account of her year-long journey to defect from the USSR and start a new life in America.
The story of
Only One Year
begins on December 19, 1966, as Svetlana Alliluyeva leaves Russia for India, on a one-month visa, in the custody of an employee of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It ends on December 19, 1967, in Princeton, New Jersey, as she and two American friends join in a toast to her new life of freedom.
That year of pain, discovery, turmoil, and new hope reaches its climax with her decision to break completely from the world of Communism, to turn her back on her country, her children, and the legacy of her notorious father—Joseph Stalin. Why did she make such a drastic choice? This book, a detailed account of reality in the USSR, is her explanation.
Frank, fascinating, and thoroughly engrossing,
reveals life behind the Iron Curtain, the risks and subterfuge of defection, and one extraordinary woman’s fight for her future.
Confession
.” —Edmund Wilson,
The New Yorker
After the success of her
New York Times
bestselling childhood memoir
Twenty Letters to a Friend
, Josef Stalin’s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva—subject of Rosemary Sullivan’s critically acclaimed biography
Stalin’s Daughter
—penned this riveting account of her year-long journey to defect from the USSR and start a new life in America.
The story of
Only One Year
begins on December 19, 1966, as Svetlana Alliluyeva leaves Russia for India, on a one-month visa, in the custody of an employee of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It ends on December 19, 1967, in Princeton, New Jersey, as she and two American friends join in a toast to her new life of freedom.
That year of pain, discovery, turmoil, and new hope reaches its climax with her decision to break completely from the world of Communism, to turn her back on her country, her children, and the legacy of her notorious father—Joseph Stalin. Why did she make such a drastic choice? This book, a detailed account of reality in the USSR, is her explanation.
Frank, fascinating, and thoroughly engrossing,
reveals life behind the Iron Curtain, the risks and subterfuge of defection, and one extraordinary woman’s fight for her future.
“Among the great Russian autobiographical works: Herzen, Kropotkin, Tolstoy’s
Confession
.” —Edmund Wilson,
The New Yorker
After the success of her
New York Times
bestselling childhood memoir
Twenty Letters to a Friend
, Josef Stalin’s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva—subject of Rosemary Sullivan’s critically acclaimed biography
Stalin’s Daughter
—penned this riveting account of her year-long journey to defect from the USSR and start a new life in America.
The story of
Only One Year
begins on December 19, 1966, as Svetlana Alliluyeva leaves Russia for India, on a one-month visa, in the custody of an employee of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It ends on December 19, 1967, in Princeton, New Jersey, as she and two American friends join in a toast to her new life of freedom.
That year of pain, discovery, turmoil, and new hope reaches its climax with her decision to break completely from the world of Communism, to turn her back on her country, her children, and the legacy of her notorious father—Joseph Stalin. Why did she make such a drastic choice? This book, a detailed account of reality in the USSR, is her explanation.
Frank, fascinating, and thoroughly engrossing,
reveals life behind the Iron Curtain, the risks and subterfuge of defection, and one extraordinary woman’s fight for her future.
Confession
.” —Edmund Wilson,
The New Yorker
After the success of her
New York Times
bestselling childhood memoir
Twenty Letters to a Friend
, Josef Stalin’s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva—subject of Rosemary Sullivan’s critically acclaimed biography
Stalin’s Daughter
—penned this riveting account of her year-long journey to defect from the USSR and start a new life in America.
The story of
Only One Year
begins on December 19, 1966, as Svetlana Alliluyeva leaves Russia for India, on a one-month visa, in the custody of an employee of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs. It ends on December 19, 1967, in Princeton, New Jersey, as she and two American friends join in a toast to her new life of freedom.
That year of pain, discovery, turmoil, and new hope reaches its climax with her decision to break completely from the world of Communism, to turn her back on her country, her children, and the legacy of her notorious father—Joseph Stalin. Why did she make such a drastic choice? This book, a detailed account of reality in the USSR, is her explanation.
Frank, fascinating, and thoroughly engrossing,
reveals life behind the Iron Curtain, the risks and subterfuge of defection, and one extraordinary woman’s fight for her future.

















