| Price:
$15.37
Hardcover: 300 pages
Dimensions (in inches): 1.19 x 8.68 x 5.78
Publisher:Helen Marx Books; (October 2003)
ISBN: 1885586582
|
The fascinating first-person account
of the cross-dressing prince who poisoned Rasputin with rose cream
cakes laced with cyanide and spiked Madeira is now back in print.
Originally published in France in 1952, during the years of Prince
Youssoupoff's exile from Russia, Lost Splendor has all the excitement
of a thriller. Born to great riches, lord of vast feudal estates
and many palaces, Felix Youssoupoff led the life of a grand seigneur
in the days before the Russian Revolution. Married to the niece
of Czar Nicholas II, he could observe at close range the rampant
corruption and intrigues of the imperial court, which culminated
in the rise to power of the sinister monk Rasputin. Finally, impelled
by patriotism and his love for the Romanoff dynasty, which he felt
was in danger of destroying itself and Russia, he killed Rasputin
in 1916 with the help of the Grand Duke Dimitri and others. More
than any other single event, this deed helped to bring about the
cataclysmic upheaval that ended in the advent of the Soviet regime.~The
author describes the luxury and glamour of his upbringing, fantastic
episodes at nightclubs and with the gypsies in St. Petersburg, grand
tours of Europe, dabbling in spiritualism and occultism, and an
occasional conscience-stricken attempt to alleviate the lot of the
poor.~Prince Youssoupoff was an aristocrat of character.
|