She also studied Russian at Voronezh State University in the former Soviet Union and at Le Centre d'Études Russes du Potager du Dauphin, a centre established by White Russian emigres outside Paris, at Meudon.
She reported from France and Africa, then spent seven years as a foreign correspondent in Russia and the CIS for Reuters and the Los Angeles Times,[1] before returning to the UK as a leader writer for The Times of London.
[1] Bennett won an American Overseas Press Club award in 1997 for her work on Russia,[2] and the British Orwell Prize for journalism in 2004.
[3] Bennett's first novel, Portrait of an Unknown Woman, told the story of the German Protestant artist Hans Holbein painting the family of the English statesman Sir Thomas More, a committed Catholic, at the time of King Henry VIII's decision to take England out of the Church of Rome in the early 1530s.
Her novel, Midnight in St Petersburg, set during the Russian Revolution, was published in 2013.