<p><strong>'A lively, sweeping overview of celebrity in the past decade in Russia, the volume includes not only consistent critical insight into the symbols and signifiers of excess and lack in mass culture but also a number of entertaining visuals. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.'</strong><em> - A. J. DeBlasio, CHOICE (August 2011)</em></p><p><strong>‘<i>Celebrity and Glamour</i> is remarkably coherent due to its authors’ collective reliance on Chris Rojek’s theorizing and classification of celebrities as well as their familiarity with each other’s essays.’</strong> <em>- Larissa Rudova, Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema</em></p><p><em>‘Celebrity and Glamour</em> is a valuable academic study of the new ideology of glamour that celebrates the triumph of capitalism in modern Russia. Written in a lively and engaging style, this volume could also provide an enjoyable reading experience for the interested non-academic reader. For those who teach courses on post-Soviet Russian culture, this book is a blessing and a long-awaited sequel to <i>Consuming Russia: Popular Culture, Sex, and Society Since Gorbachev</i>, edited by Adele Baker.' <i>- Larissa Rudova, Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema</i></p><p><strong>'In Russian Studies, glamour is the new black. This phenomenon, so central a feature of Putin’s reign, has begun to attract scholarly interest both in Russia itself and in the West. But what exactly is the purpose of glamour in Russia? This question lies at the heart of this, the first book-length study of Russian glamour and its related concept, celebrity. As such, it is an especially welcome addition to the growing literature on twenty-fi rst-century Russia. [...] the avowed aim of this volume is to lay the foundations for future research into what Goscilo herself describes as ‘the two most important cultural signifiers of Putin’s era’ (p. 22). There can be no doubt that this excellent volume succeeds admirably in this aim.'</strong> – <em>Graham H. Roberts, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, published in Slavonica Vol. 18 No. 1, April, 2012, pp. 75 – 76</em></p>