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Dark Shadows: Inside the Secret World of Kazakhstan

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Dark Shadows is a compelling portrait of Kazakhstan, a country that is little known in the West. Strategically located in the heart of Central Asia, sandwiched between Vladimir Putin's Russia, its former colonial ruler, and Xi Jinping's China, this vast oil-rich state is carving out its place in the world as it contends with its own complex past and present. Journalist Joanna Lillis paints a vibrant picture of this emerging nation through vivid reportage based on 13 years of on-the-ground coverage, and travels across the length and breadth of this enigmatic country that lies along the ancient Silk Road and at the geopolitical and cultural crossroads where East meets West.

Featuring tales of murder and abduction, intrigue and betrayal, extortion and corruption, this book explores how a president, Nursultan Nazarbayev, transformed himself into a potentate and the economically-struggling state he inherited at the fall of the USSR into a swaggering 21st-century monocracy. A colourful cast of characters brings the politics to life: from strutting oligarch to sleeping villagers, from principled politicians to striking oilmen, from crusading journalists to courageous campaigners.

Traversing dust-blown deserts and majestic mountains, taking in glitzy cities and dystopian landscapes, Dark Shadows conjures up Kazakhstan as a living, breathing place, full of extraordinary people living extraordinary lives.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published January 30, 2019

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About the author

Joanna Lillis

2 books7 followers
Joanna Lillis is a freelance journalist who has been based in Central Asia since 2001 and in Kazakhstan since 2005. Joanna Lillis writes for EurasiaNet.org.

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5 stars
48 (17%)
4 stars
138 (50%)
3 stars
76 (28%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews
Profile Image for Max Berendsen.
129 reviews88 followers
August 29, 2023
3.5 stars.

Kazakhstan is a country which will never seize to interest me. Being a natural crossroads between Russia, China and the (other) Islamic/Turkic countries to its south, it occupies a unique place on the world map and gives it a guarantee of enormous geopolitical importance.

In "Dark Shadows" Joanna Lillis provides the reader with an intriguing portret of Kazakhstan. The first part is concerned with the power of the former dictator Nursultan Nazarbayev. The so-called "Father of the Nation" and the clique of oligarchs surrounding him. One might say that this first part reads a bit like a post-soviet Game of Thrones.

The second part puts the focus on the modern Kazakh identity. Despite being a country with a rich culture and history, Kazakhstan is still very much looking for its place in the world and the course it should steer domestically as well as on the global stage. This can be challenging for a Turkic nation that's where Russian is the lingua franca and is increasingly becoming economically dependent on China (being a key factor in its "Belt and Road" initiative). Not to mention that the country is home to dozens of ethnic minorities.

The third part concentrates on human interest stories, such as a nuclear scientist from Moscow who made a career switch to ostrich-farming after his retirement or a former finance minister turned viticulturalist. This third part really drives home the point of Kazakhstan's uniqueness in the world.

Despite the fact that "Dark Shadows" is a very interesting read it feels painfully repetitive at certain parts. Especially in the first two parts of the book. In my opinion it would have been better if there was a slightly bigger focus on more history and anthropology.

Would definitely recommend to anyone interested in this fascinating and increasingly important country!
Profile Image for Jason.
1,181 reviews15 followers
April 27, 2019
The best book I've read on modern Kazakhstan, although there's really not much competition (at least not in English). The book is organized almost as essays, covering general themes of contemporary Kazakhstan: its governance, its Soviet legacy, the environment, and its history. Many of these overlap, and as such sometimes an essay feels as though it's miscategorized. There's no Outro or wrap-up; the end felt more abrupt than other such books, and I think it would have been a good idea to include one.

I didn't get much of a feeling as though I understood Kazakhstan in general more than I did before reading this, because this is not a book about the generalities of the country, though that might change with distance. However, the book is already beginning to render itself anachronistic since Nazarbayev has noted he plans on stepping down soon.
Profile Image for Hadrian.
438 reviews250 followers
January 14, 2022
Lillis, a journalist for multiple publications with over a decade's worth of experience in Kazakhstan, wrote the book in three parts. The first, broadly defined, describes the Kazakh political system, the second, again in the broadest sense, discusses questions of Kazakh identity, and the third, more of a grab bag, discusses the lives of ordinary citizens.

The first part of the book describes Kazakhstan as an authoritarian regime and the power of the country's first head of state, Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has led the country from its formal declaration of independence in 1990 up to his resignation in 2019, a year after this book's publication. There is a brief chapter which only hints at the political relationships between Nazabayev, and the former Secretary of the Communist Party of Kazakhstan, Dinmukhamed Kunaev, and that turmoil in the late Gorbachev years - that is, how Nazarbayev came to power - but I confess I am still mystified.

She would not be the only person to describe the administration of Nazarbayev in critical terms, and Lillis cites human rights reporters and activists inside the country and elsewhere. But that said, the portrayal of this system is complicated for an introduction; a chapter is devoted to the life and career of Mukhtar Ablyazov, who has apparently reinvented himself as a dissident - and Lillis alludes to Ablyazov's off-share dealings and shady bank accounts.

The second part of the book is about the people of Kazakhstan and their various histories and backgrounds - perhaps implicitly about the formation of a nation-state. There is a sizable Russian minority, as well as Chechens who were deported during the Stalinist era and many others. Additionally, Lillis spends a chapter on the Oralman - the Kazakh diaspora who found themselves outside of the country's borders after the fall of the Soviet Union and subsequently emigrated back.

Even so, there is a kind of tension growing in her story - a tension between a political repression and growing economy - a disharmonious state of affairs that could falter if the economy takes a setback. Additionally, her use of the term "Clan State" suggests a competition between multiple factions in elite politics.

The third part of the book a collection of human-interest reportage - stories about sleeping sickness, an ostrich farm, nuclear waste, and the repercussions from the draining of the Aral Sea by the Soviets in the mid-20th century.

As I knew very little about Kazakhstan before, I am in no place to offer any substantial analysis here. I cannot make any claims about how this integrates into scholarship or further journalistic efforts, and certainly not anything about the political system. But Lillis, through her constant returns to man-on-the-street interviews, has an obvious rapport with the people of Kazakhstan themselves.
1 review1 follower
January 5, 2019
I knew nothing about Kazakhstan going into this book and I have come away with the feeling that I have gotten a glimpse into an enormous, complex and compelling country. I think the book is a great primer on the various political as social aspects of Kazakhstan. It is by no means something like a comprehensive history, but I loved the format of short chapters on various topics. For me, when I am new to a subject I retain much more when it is presented in small chunks. The book covers 20th and 21st century history and the book is focused on firsthand accounts of important historical moments from witnesses the author has interviewed.

Joanna Lillis’s writing is straightforward and compelling. I tore through the book a number of days, something that is uncommon for me with nonfiction. Overall, if you are interested in Eurasia, I would highly recommend.
Profile Image for MH.
120 reviews5 followers
February 11, 2019
I learned a lot about Kazakhstan by reading this book. Each chapter provides a glimpse into issues that could each have a book written about them: corruption, human rights, freedom of speech, nuclear testing, Aral Sea, to name a few. Lillis didn't seem to have an agenda with her reporting, such as demonizing Nazaybayev, when a lot of Western reporting focuses solely on negatives from a dictator's rule (I'm looking at you, NY Times). She presented the bad and the good of his rule in a balanced manner. Also liked how she presented Kazakhstan as more than just a post-Soviet state. I gained a better understanding of Kazakh culture by reading this book.
Profile Image for Amanda .
777 reviews13 followers
December 31, 2022
I knew nothing about Kazakhstan prior to reading this book. I appreciated how Lillis, a journalist, broke down a broad overview of the country without bogging the reader down into minutiae.

Lillis's chapters read like essays. They cover Kazakhstan's system of governance, Kazakh identity, the impact of living under decades of Soviet rule, and life under Kazakh rule.

I found Lillis's essays to be informative, if repetitive when discussing the repressive regime under 28 year defacto president, Nursultan Nazarbayev. Hearing from so many interviewees, rather than just through the eyes of Lillis, made the book more well rounded.

A few nitpicks: Lillis was unable to keep her opinions out of the book, which made her seem less objective. She described a couple of women in the book like homely and sturdy, which were wholly unnecessary. She also inserted her personal opinion and put beliefs she didn't agree with in quotes, which didn't bolster her credibility as an objective observer.

In addition, some of the words used in the book seemed like she had a thesaurus in one hand and then randomly plucked out words when a better known one would have served just as well. I consider myself to be an educated person but I felt like I needed a dictionary several times to decode words I'd never seen before.

Lastly, she would refer to a person by their matronymic name and then, in their patronymic name, which was confusing and unnecessary. If the reader is only reading about a person' story briefly and then never returns to this reader, knowing their two different last names unnecessarily clouds the water.

Overall, though, I thought this book was a good introduction to Kazakhstan.
Profile Image for Alejandro EP.
18 reviews1 follower
August 24, 2021
Documentadísimo recorrido del Kazajistán de ayer y de hoy de la mano de la periodista Joanna Lillis, conocedora de la realidad del mundo exsoviético y afincada en Kazajistán desde hace varios años.

A excepción de la primera parte, que es un poco floja y demasiado densa, este libro recoge pinceladas de lo más variopintas: desde el proceso de "nation-building" del país, con todos sus entresijos religiosos, étnicos y lingüísticos, hasta las historias más mundanas de su geografía, pasando por la tragedia del mar de Aral, el 'polígono' nuclear de Semipalatinsk y la pujante industria vitivinícola patria. Apasionante trabajo de investigación periodística.
Profile Image for Julia.
115 reviews3 followers
August 23, 2023
This book was quite boring. I was hoping to learn more about Kazakhs daily lives, families, attitudes, cuisine - those traits that make people a nation. Dark Shadows concentrates on government control of social movements, treatment of dissidents, muzzling of free press - all very important issues, however, I was not able to feel what it's like to live in Kazakhstan in late 20th -early 21st century. The atmosphere is lacking.
Profile Image for Mac.
188 reviews2 followers
April 1, 2022
Enlightening and readable book on a country I knew very little about. Lone complaint is that it ended very suddenly.
Profile Image for Ietrio.
6,726 reviews25 followers
July 22, 2019
Shambala, Atlantis and now Kazakhstan. I wonder what potions did Lillis drink, what herbs Lillis had to smoke in order to be admitted to this "secret world"?
4 reviews
August 29, 2020
A decent introduction to Kazakhstan. Don't expect a sweeping examination of modern Kazakh history. Most of the chapters stand on their own and except for some loose connections made between those dealing with politics, there is no overarching narrative. However, it does a decent if surface-level job of covering the major events leading up to and following Kazakhstan's independence.

The book is divided into three sections. The first broadly focuses on contemporary politics in Kazakhstan, from the collapse of the USSR to the present day. Nazarbayev's conflicts with political rivals and opposition, human rights issues, and Kazakhstan's international image are discussed. The second examines identity, telling the story of how Kazakhstan became such a multi-ethnic state, the resurgence of Kazakh identity, and the balancing act Akorda must play with identity politics. The third section is a collection of stories that illustrates the diversity of peoples in Kazakhstan and the impact the Soviet legacy has had on them.

Lillis brings in a wide variety of voices and covers the pressing issues of contemporary Kazakhstan, with her examinations of identity being especially interesting. The personal stories told in the third section of her book were probably my favorite part. They range from an eccentric and strident atheist to a nuclear scientist turned ostrich farmer to the victims of Soviet nuclear testing, giving the reader a scattershot of diverse individuals and their struggles and successes dealing with Kazakhstan's Soviet legacy.

I do have some nitpicks with the book. It is repetitive at times, occasionally rehashing information that was covered in previous chapters. This is probably due to the journalistic style it is written in, with each chapter essentially a self-contained article. I don't mind this stylistic decision, but the repetition is grating. The author also has a tendency to overuse descriptive adjectives, resulting in portrayals of people and places that are overly flowery and almost fairy tale-esque at times. Finally, her use of paratheses to introduce information is excessive. A glossary of necessary terms, or simplifying the text for the average reader with no knowledge of Kazakhstan or the Kazakh and Russian languages would have been better. Alternating between family names and patronymics or adding Kazakh forms of address such as aga, azhe, and so on seems unnecessary for a book targeted at the lay reader. Adding in the necessary accompanying explanation only clutters up the text.

Overall, a decent introduction that does justice to the country and people it is describing. My nitpicks are largely just that, nitpicks, and if you're looking to learn about contemporary Kazakhstan, this is a good place to start.
Profile Image for Rhonda Hankins.
686 reviews1 follower
Read
February 15, 2020
A parade of despicable behavior in this book with each chapter introducing yet another way for humans to be evil. Is there a word for worse than evil? The common denominator throughout the book is individuals getting their lives crushed decade after decade after decade by whatever top tier of thugs is in power.

This is Kazakhstan?

Exhausting to read one depressing chapter after another with no hope and no reason to believe masses of individuals won't continue to get their lives crushed and cut short in brutal ways.
75 reviews
July 19, 2019
Felt like a cobbling together of articles written by the author re: Kazakhstan -- tone was very journalistic, and some of the chapters repeated themselves without recognition that the material had been covered earlier in the book. That said, I learned a lot about a country I knew absolutely nothing about.
Profile Image for Gabit.
50 reviews9 followers
November 26, 2020
This book gets five stars because the author had actually put a lot of effort into understanding Kazakhstan. And not all things are so dark in this book.
Profile Image for Rhoda.
678 reviews31 followers
April 29, 2022
3.5 stars

This was my read the world selection for Kazakhstan

The author of this book is a Kazakhstan based journalist and here she has presented her book in three sections. The first describes the political system, the second examines the history and identity of the country and the third covers a few different events and occurrences in the lives of ordinary citizens.

The result is an interesting and rather shocking look into a country I knew very little about. The political landscape of the country is mind blowing to say the least and reinforced to me just how many awful people there are in powerful positions (as if I needed reminding 🙄). Honestly, I felt like I was reading a movie plot during this part of the book.

The history and identity section of the book covered somewhat drier material, however the author clearly tries to make it more interesting by inserting comments and thoughts of various people she has interviewed. It also provides some rather enlightening views held by former USSR patriots 😳
The final part is a little more random, but presents views and stories from the average Kazakh.

This book was rather shocking and overwhelming at times in such a way that is difficult to describe. It was a little depressing to read and realize just how many ways there are for humans to be evil ☹️ Tough but fascinating…..and not always in a good way. ⭐️⭐️⭐️.5/5
Profile Image for Jennifer.
319 reviews1 follower
February 21, 2021
I wasn’t sure I was going to read all of this book, but Lillis’ excellent and engaging writing and short chapters on varied topics kept me going. Her writing about corruption and persecution of dissidents, opposition politicians, and independent media often get bogged down in endless detail, and I skimmed now and again. Much of the book reads to me like a journalist finally getting to pack in all the details, color, and information that often gets cut by newspaper editors crunched for space.

I was left wishing for more glimmers of hope or at least anticipation of positive change for the future, more about cultural and spiritual practices.

In the end, I’m saddened by all the losses that the Kazakh have suffered at the hands of Moscow - culture, environment, public health, political freedom, etc.

I can only imagine that Lillis is alternately gnashing her teeth about Nazarbaev’s “retirement” occurring just as the book came out and possible enthusiasm for writing about the next chapter of Kazakhstan’s history and people.

Background: I’ve been traveling and working in Russia and other former Soviet and near-Soviet states for decades. The last few years I have really focused my reading and attention on Central Asia, particularly Mongolia and Kazakhstan.
120 reviews4 followers
September 15, 2021
Really well written. The first two sections can get a bit dry unless you, like me, are fascinated about Central Asian autocracy, but the third section, telling stories about different people in Kazakhstan is amazing.

It's particularly welcome because there is so little written about Kazakhstan. When I moved there 10 years ago, I could only find one poorly written book about it (and dozens of people making borat jokes). The book in question was Apples are From Kazakhstan which makes Kazakhstan seem super fun and quirky, and completely ignores the long history of human rights violations and corruption.

So thank you Joanna Lillis for writing this brilliant book, thank you for your respect for the people of Kazakhstan, and many thanks for telling the stories of the people of Kazakhstan who never get heard because of the loud, loud regime that silences them.
Profile Image for Arthur.
114 reviews1 follower
October 16, 2022
The success of Borat leverages the fact that people in the West know so little of Kazakhstan. This book provides a wonderful insight into the history of Kazakhstan with an emphasis on recent events. Many significant events and their background are described, e.g. the Asharshylyk (the famine in the early 1930s), the nuclear testing, the protests in Zhanaozen in 2011, the 1986 Zheltoksan protests, the Aral sea environmental disaster, and the political infights. I found the book very informative and easy to read. The background provided is also important to better understand what is happening in relation to the Russian invasion of Ukraine (which of course already started in 2014). It would be great if the book would be updated in due course with the 2022 January unrest in Kazakhstan and what is currently playing out as a result of the aforementioned invasion.
Profile Image for Michael Jolls.
Author 7 books9 followers
February 14, 2024
My current rating of the book is somewhere between 3 & 4 (out of 5), but there's no doubt that if I were to spend time in Kazakhstan, I would appreciate what Joanna Lillis composed in "Dark Shadows" significantly more. The book is twenty-nine different profiles of modern Kazakhstan, reflecting on its last three decades since independence; ergo, primarily the 2010s, with a little 2020s. Whatever Russian history I knew felt completely dwarfed reading this book because "Dark Shadows" covers everything from culture, economics, geography, and politics. By no means does that suggest Lillis is a poor author, (quite the opposite, as there are quick recaps to help give the foreign reader grounding), but rather, how thorough the book is.
Profile Image for Soobin.
1 review
June 4, 2021
This book is a collection of dispatches from thirteen years of reporting on Kazakhstan, with stories ranging from elites to deportees, the country’ half-a-millenium-old history to recent events, and environmental disasters to ostrich farms.

Lillis includes her stories on some of the biggest tragedies incurred by Kazakhstan’s past as a Soviet republic. Among them are the manmade famine Asharshylyk; shrinking Aral Sea; nuclear testing ground polygon, labor camp Karlag; and violent suppression of Zheltoksan, a rebellion that broke out after the announcement of an outsider named as leader. Post-independence, the government has been making big strides to strengthen national identity like providing relocation support for Kazakhs abroad to return to the “historical homeland (oralman), changing the alphabet back to latin, and trying to host international events. The book also lays bare KAZ's authoritarian bent with stories about the regime violently suppressing protests in oiltown Zhanaozen, shutting down anti-state newspaper Respublika and magazines Adam Bol and Adam, and silencing well-known human rights campaigner Yevgeniy Zhotis.

Some of these stories would put Kazakhstan on the map if more people knew about them, like the story of Nazarbayev’s former son-in-law Rakhat Aliyev who ordered an assassination of an opposition leader and two bankers. Or the story of billionaire Mukhtar Ablyazov who is on the run for money laundering and co-founding a political party (DMV) for democratic reform. Lillis’ real-life characters are extraordinary, brazen, and utterly fascinating.

Many books about KAZ are unfortunately state-commissioned PR pieces. Dark Shadows is critical throughout and offers thoughtful commentary.
Profile Image for Paulo Vitorino.
30 reviews23 followers
March 20, 2023
A great book on the bad and good Kazakhstan offers. After a first part on the biggest corruption scandals connected to the family of the first president, the book enters into a more humanist view of social problems in Kazakhstan (even if some connected to corruption and mismanagement by the elites): children infected by HIV; stories around the former nuclear testing site; or the story of how a man wants to put Kazakhstan into the world’s wine map.

A must read for the lovers of Kazakhstan. The ones that are able to look to the bad, the corruption and oligarchic rule, in the hope of a better Kazakhstan.
Profile Image for Stephen Watt.
53 reviews
March 15, 2020
I am going to take a guess that Borat wasn't mentioned because that would be considered a salacious detail that attracts the wrong kind of analysis and serves as a sort of crude indignity cast at the national character... but how are you going to write a book with a kaleidoscope of socio-political vignettes illustrating modern day Kazakhstan without mentioning the show/movie, especially for the Kazakh reaction to it? The omission is glaring, and disappointing.
Profile Image for Emma.
226 reviews
January 1, 2023
Kicked the year off by finishing this. I travelled round Kazakhstan in 2012. It really was an eye opener. I thought the chapter on Semey was especially fascinating and sensitively handled. There is also a slightly more positive, less western bias, to Lillas’s work. Kazakhstan, like many of the post soviet states, is extremely complex. It’s the sort of place that remains impenetrable to most of us without works like this. Credit to Lillas for this.
Profile Image for Chumba Tribes.
115 reviews5 followers
December 29, 2022
A brilliant (and rare) insight into the history, politics and, most important, the people of Kazakhstan by a journalist who has spent many years in the field and knows really well what she is talking about. A must read by anyone interested in what has been and is going on in arguably the most important country in Russia’s backyard. Captivating and at the same time thoroughly enjoyable.
Profile Image for Kw Estes.
97 reviews10 followers
September 14, 2020
The book is filled with informative and humanizing journalistic tales from post-Soviet Kazakhstan. This would be particularly edifying for those planning to travel to or study/work in Kazakhstan, rather than an area specialist.
Profile Image for Kimberly Brooks.
504 reviews1 follower
October 22, 2022
Kazakhstan seems like such a rough place…one that we never hear anything about. There were lots of interesting (and heartbreaking!) people and events in this book, but the writing was pretty awkward. Lots of repeated verbs and adjectives.
Profile Image for Olya.
478 reviews1 follower
Shelved as 'abandoned'
July 14, 2019
Could not figure out where the author was going with all this meandering.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
133 reviews1 follower
November 30, 2020
Ever wanted to learn more about Kazakhstan? Look no further than Dark Shadows by Joanna Lillis. Insights on the past, preset and future of this fascinating country.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 37 reviews

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