Review of the hardback: '... by placing Russian suicide in a pan-European context, she adds to the ongoing discussion of Russia and the west. In the process, she offers more innovative insights into Russia than I have read in years.' Louise McReynolds, Slavic Review
Review of the hardback: 'This book is filled with interesting and important insights about Russian culture and society, about modernity in Russia and Europe, and about modern subjectivity. Its treatment of sources is penetrating and, at times, fascinating. The book stakes its own claim to its own peculiarity by treating the subject differently than previous treatments of self-killing from merely sociological, psychological, and literary perspectives, and in so doing firmly establishes itself as an important historical perspective on suicide and the body politic in Imperial Russia. It is worth the energy of a close reading.' John P. Farrell, Canadian Journal of History
Review of the hardback: '... this is cultural history at its best and deserves a readership beyond Russian specialists. Indeed, a short review cannot do justice to its wide scope, rich material and multiple levels of argument. The historical study of suicide, in Morrissey's hands, both deepens and begins to chip away at our notions of the past.' Social History
Review of the hardback: 'The breadth of this undertaking is admirable and Morrissey's thesis is a sound one that enriches the field of Russian History. She challenges accepted paradigms and periodizations and, in the process, demonstrates that modernity itself is a hugely fraught process ...' Abby M. Schrader, The Russian Review
Review of the hardback: 'This lucid and subtly textured book ... should be read by all historians of modernity - medical, cultural, social, and political.' Dan Healey, Medical History
Review of the hardback: 'Susan Morrissey's study of the Russian encounter with suicide from the seventeenth to the early twentieth century is an exemplary model of social-historical scholarship - extensively researched, situated in both comparative and particular historical contexts, interpretively wide-ranging.' Mark Steinberg, Journal of Social History
Review of the hardback: '... an important contribution to the field, offering original and highly suggestive insights into the cultural and social significance of suicide in late Imperial Russia's autocratic regime.' Seer