| Price:
$20.97
Paperback: 230 pages
Dimensions (in inches): 0.85 x 9.70 x 9.38
Publisher:Back Bay Books; (November 1, 1998)
ISBN: 0316557889
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It's easy now to indulge in nostalgia
about the era of the Romanovs, and the sheer lushness of this gorgeous
book is enough to encourage the indulgence. Even the text, highly
readable and informative, is a little rose-tinted in places, but
perhaps the authors can hardly be blamed when the gentlemanly cruelties
of the old regime look so innocent next to the quintessentially
totalitarian 20th-century hell that replaced them. (Nowhere was
the true nature of the new "people's" dispensation revealed
more vividly than in the lurid, incompetent savagery with which
Nicholas II and his family were dispatched, a story reconstructed
in considerable detail here.) In any case, despite a touch of sentimentality,
this is a fine short history of how the Romanov dynasty ended, artfully
disguised as a coffee-table book. If you merely flip through the
pictures (Ekaterinburg, Tsarkoe Selo, the Cathedral of Peter and
Paul at St. Petersburg, shining like a gold dagger in the snow),
you will ache to travel to Russia. If you read the text, you will
learn a surprising amount about the world of an almost comically
ineffectual man with whom the Fates amused themselves by placing
him at a key turning point in modern history. Heartless autocrat
that he was, you may even end up feeling sorry for him: the cure
was so much worse than the disease
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