https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-vghxg-1aae06a
Matt and Michael dig into Amor Towles’ A Gentleman in Moscow, the story of Count Alexander Rostov, an aristocrat placed under house arrest in a five-star Moscow hotel for thirty years. What does it mean to keep your greatest qualities when everything else has been stripped away? They explore the Count’s resistance through community and craft rather than power, the extraction logic baked into both capitalism and communism, the tragedy of true believers like Mishka, and why the Bishop is the most recognizable villain in the book. Plus: Napoleon burning Moscow, redundancy versus efficiency as civilizational philosophy, and why the bread was better in Berlin.
Next episode: Paradise Lost by John Milton.