My book
East to West Across Russia: The Long Journey Home was reviewed on
Literary Titan. It is a very good and positive review. I would like this review
to be published on the Austin Macauley Website and under the various reviews of
my book.
You can
read the review here:
East to
West Across Russia follows
a man who chases a childhood dream across the entire span of Russia. He flies
to Vladivostok and then rides the Trans Siberian Railway all the way to Moscow.
Along the way, he wanders through fog-soaked hills, quiet cities, lonely
platforms, and the deep interior of his own memory. The story blends real
travel with imagined scenes that reveal his heartbreak, his longing, and his
hunger for meaning. Russia’s forests, rivers, and rail stations move past his
window like an old film reel, and he uses every mile to reach inward as much as
he reaches westward.
The writing
swings between poetic and raw, sometimes in the space of a single page. I liked
that about it. The style is big on feeling and big on atmosphere. I caught
myself smiling at the simple little moments, like the chaos of breakfast or the
clinking of tea glasses on the train. Other times I felt a tug in my chest when
he drifted into memories of lost love or those spiraling thoughts that come
when the world is quiet and a person finally has to face himself. The prose has
a kind of earnest honesty that feels almost old-fashioned, and it hit me harder
than I expected.
There were
moments, though, when the intensity of the reflection felt a bit heavy. Every
small detail seems to carry emotional weight, and every encounter becomes a
doorway into deeper meaning. Part of me admired that dedication. Still, the
narrator’s sincerity kept me grounded. I found myself rooting for him even when
he veered into melancholy. His curiosity about Russia, about its people and
history and vastness, felt real. His tenderness toward strangers, even brief
ones like Alexei on the plane, made the journey feel warm and human.
By the time
I reached the final pages, I felt the quiet satisfaction that comes after
finishing a long trip and finally setting your bags down. I walked away
thinking this book fits readers who love travel stories that linger in the soul
rather than just list places on a map. It will speak to anyone who enjoys
reflective writing, who has ever chased a dream across a border, or who has
ever tried to heal by moving forward one small step at a time. If you want a
journey that is both physical and emotional and are willing to sit with someone
else’s heart for a while, this book is a good companion.
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