The Tsarina's Daughter
Books | Fiction / Historical / General
3.3
Carolly Erickson
From the bestselling author of The Hidden Diary of Marie Antoinette comes a dramatic novel and powerful love story about the last Russian imperial family.It is 1989 and Daria Gradov is an elderly grandmother living in the rural West. What neighbors and even her children don't know, however, is that she is not who she claims to be—the widow of a Russian immigrant of modest means. In actuality she began her life as the Grand Duchess Tatiana, known as Tania to her parents, Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra. And so begins the latest entrancing historical entertainment by Carolly Erickson. At its center is young Tania, who lives a life of incomparable luxury in pre-Revolutionary Russia, from the magnificence of the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg to the family's private enclave outside the capital. Tania is one of four daughters, and the birth of her younger brother Alexei is both a blessing and a curse. When he is diagnosed with hemophilia and the key to his survival lies in the mysterious power of the illiterate monk Rasputin, it is merely an omen of much worse things to come. Soon war breaks out and revolution sweeps the family from power and into claustrophobic imprisonment in Siberia. Into Tania's world comes a young soldier whose life she helps to save and who becomes her partner in daring plans to rescue the imperial family from certain death.
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More Details:
Author
Carolly Erickson
Pages
336
Publisher
St. Martin's Publishing Group
Published Date
2008-09-30
ISBN
1429960876 9781429960878
Ratings
Google: 3
Community ReviewsSee all
"Carolly Erickson, the well-regarded chronicler of royal families, notably the Tudors, tries her hand at the Romanovs, with so-so results. Last of the Russian emperors,all slaughtered during the Bolshevik Revolution, Erickson imagines their final years through the eyes of Tatiana, the 2nd oldest of Nicholas and Alexandra's 5 children. Intelligent and resourceful, Erickson's Tania sneaks out of the palace to mingle with peasants and revolutionaries, somehow managing love affairs with a German prince, a Russian idealist, and a Georgian warrior all before her 20th birthday.Yet her escapades are as lackluster as they are improbable. Tatiana's family and friends never really come to life, although the portraits of her hapless parents, cruelly ill-prepared to handle the demands of modern monarchy, are duly disturbing."