In 1876, Suvorin acquired ownership of the failing newspaper
Novoye Vremya ("New Times"); he remained the editor in chief until his death. In 1880, he founded a reputable historical journal,
Istorichesky Vestnik. He confessed to favour the newspaper over his family and worked hard to expand its circulation. By the end of the 1880s,
Novoye Vremya counted as one of the most profitable and up-to-date enterprises in the Russian publishing industry. The venture brought him an opportunity of influencing the younger generation with his conservative and increasingly reactionary pronouncements in the vein of
Mikhail Katkov and
Konstantin Pobedonostsev.
Novoye Vremya enthusiastically supported the policies of
anti-Semitism and
russification promoted by the government of
Alexander III. In his book on the
Russian Revolution of 1905, one of the former leaders of that revolution,
Leon Trotsky, described Suvorin's hatred for even the very idea of revolution: "'Revolution,' old Suvorin, that arch-reptile of the Russian bureaucracy, wrote at the end of November [1905], 'gives an extraordinary elan to men and gains a multitude of devoted, fanatical adherents who are prepared to sacrifice their lives. The struggle against revolution is so difficult precisely because it has so much fervor, courage, sincere eloquence, and ardent enthusiasm to contend with. The stronger the enemy, the more resolute and courageous revolution becomes, and with every victory it attracts a swarm of admirers. Anyone who does not know this, who does not know that revolution is attractive like a young, passionate woman with arms flung wide, showering avid kisses on you with hot, feverish lips, has never been young.'" During Suvorin's declining years,
Vasily Rozanov and several other popular journalists of his newspaper were allowed considerable discretion in airing their idiosyncratic views. They pioneered a new style of adversary journalism, which frequently bordered on personal attacks. Suvorin's intense dislike of reform and reformers was deeply entrenched: back in 1873, his first wife had been shot dead by her lover, a liberal officer who proceeded to commit suicide. Another influence was
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, with whom he was on close terms, especially during the last year of the novelist's life. Suvorin was succeeded at the helm of the family business by one of his sons. His grave is in the
Alexander Nevsky Lavra. == Suvorin Theatre ==