It is now widely acknowledged that biography is merely a form of applied fiction; it is the creation of a life rather than its re-creation. Therefore, it is entirely appropriate that D.M. Thomas, a distinguished novelist, has written this biography of Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Thomas brings to the task a long-standing interest in Russian history, a knowledge of its language sufficient to act as a published translator of Russian poetry, psychological sensibilities honed by an understanding of psychoanalysis, and a novelist’s narrative style. This latter skill is particularly important because, as the book’s subtitle (A Century in His Life) suggests, Thomas wishes to place Solzhenitsyn in historical context, to illustrate his entwined life and art and his role as the conscience of a culture.