Based on nearly 500 oral history interviews, When Sonia Met Boris is an innovative study of Jewish daily life in the Soviet Union, giving a long-suppressed voice to the Jewish men and women who survived the sustained violence and everyday hardship of Stalin's Russia.
This page-turning, concise volume makes excellent use of oral histories to add flesh to an otherwise linear narrative of the Jewish experience in the Soviet Union and goes beyond to show how those experiences shaped the trajectories of the people who lived through not just the major historical events but also less eventful and at times mundane individual histories of their own lives.