April 06, 2021

Lock and Load


Lock and Load
Practical? Maybe not. Badass? Definitely.
Vitaly V. Kuzmin, Wikimedia Commons

If you absolutely need to pepper the air with five shotgun shells in rapid succession, Russia's foremost arms manufacturer has you covered.

Rostech, the state monopoly corporation that oversees the production of military equipment, has announced the re-release of its revolver shotgun. We'll leave it up to you whether it looks goofy or cool.

The firearm, which features a drum of five 12-gauge shells that are fired in a semiautomatic sequence, is scheduled to enter production later this year for the civilian hunting sector. What exactly you need five quick shotgun blasts to hunt is anyone's guess.

Dubbed the MTc-255, it's likely to be the only gun of its kind on the market. A limited production run occurred in the 1990s and 2000s, but, due to the poor economic situation in Russia at the time (apparently demand for revolver shotguns just wasn't there), the project fizzled out. Rostech is now proud to be breathing new life into this curio, since Russia's fiscal situation is doing well enough these days that some citizens might have the disposable income to pick one up.

Unfortunately, the revolver shotgun is a little old-school in that it doesn't sync to your phone. But that just makes those high-noon cattle-rustler patrols all the more immersive.

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Some of Our Books

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Tolstoy Bilingual

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This compact, yet surprisingly broad look at the life and work of Tolstoy spans from one of his earliest stories to one of his last, looking at works that made him famous and others that made him notorious. 
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This astonishingly gripping autobiography by the founder of the Russian Women’s Death Battallion in World War I is an eye-opening documentary of life before, during and after the Bolshevik Revolution.
Moscow and Muscovites

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Marooned in Moscow
May 01, 2011

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This gripping autobiography plays out against the backdrop of Russia's bloody Civil War, and was one of the first Western eyewitness accounts of life in post-revolutionary Russia. Marooned in Moscow provides a fascinating account of one woman's entry into war-torn Russia in early 1920, first-person impressions of many in the top Soviet leadership, and accounts of the author's increasingly dangerous work as a journalist and spy, to say nothing of her work on behalf of prisoners, her two arrests, and her eventual ten-month-long imprisonment, including in the infamous Lubyanka prison. It is a veritable encyclopedia of life in Russia in the early 1920s.

The Little Humpbacked Horse
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The Little Humpbacked Horse

A beloved Russian classic about a resourceful Russian peasant, Vanya, and his miracle-working horse, who together undergo various trials, exploits and adventures at the whim of a laughable tsar, told in rich, narrative poetry.

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Moscow and Muscovites
November 26, 2013

Moscow and Muscovites

Vladimir Gilyarovsky's classic portrait of the Russian capital is one of Russians’ most beloved books. Yet it has never before been translated into English. Until now! It is a spectactular verbal pastiche: conversation, from gutter gibberish to the drawing room; oratory, from illiterates to aristocrats; prose, from boilerplate to Tolstoy; poetry, from earthy humor to Pushkin. 

Survival Russian
February 01, 2009

Survival Russian

Survival Russian is an intensely practical guide to conversational, colloquial and culture-rich Russian. It uses humor, current events and thematically-driven essays to deepen readers’ understanding of Russian language and culture. This enlarged Second Edition of Survival Russian includes over 90 essays and illuminates over 2000 invaluable Russian phrases and words.

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