Ratings1
Average rating3
With bonus features--insights, interviews and more! In present-day Boston, Nina Revskaya, once a great star of the Russian ballet, has decided to auction her jewellery collection and donate the proceeds to the Boston Ballet Foundation. It is a mysterious gesture that has piqued the interest of two particular individuals: a rising associate director at the auction house, Drew Brooks, who seeks to unravel the provenance of the pieces; and a professor and Russian translator at the nearby university, Grigori Solodin, who believes the jewels might hold the key to his past. The stakes are raised when an anonymous individual donates a necklace that perfectly matches the bracelet and earrings in Nina’s collection, claiming the pieces belong together. It is this donation that will bring Drew and Grigori together in unexpected ways to uncover the story behind Nina’s fabulous jewels—a bounty said to have been smuggled out of Stalinist Russia when she defected from the country in the early 1950s. It was there, in Russia, that Nina first learned to dance, fell in love with the handsome poet Viktor Elsin, and struggled with the choice to pursue her craft or begin a family. Nina and her circle of free-thinking artist friends lived in constant fear of Stalin’s disapproval, of arrest and torture by the secret police for unpatriotic behaviour and so-called crimes against the state. Yet when their circle was broken by just such an arrest, a devastating misunderstanding parted the four friends and lovers forever.
Reviews with the most likes.
Enjoyed this book immensely. The author, Daphne Kalotay, masterfully told the story of Nina, a Russian ballerina, during Stalin's reign in Russia. I was taken behind the scenes of the ballet company and into the lives of those who mattered to Nina then and later in her life, when she had escaped the stranglehold of that regime to live in Boston.
The novel begins with Nina in a wheelchair ready to sell her jewels at an auction. These jewels bring together the auction house representative and a university prof. who has some relationship to Nina in an unexpected way. As well, Nina discovers her past was not what she thought it was. Highly recommend this story for a glimpse of what it meant to be an artist under the communist system, as dictated by Stalin. Romance, mystery and history.
Books
7 booksIf you enjoyed this book, then our algorithm says you may also enjoy these.