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After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle poque Throug - GOOD

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Gut: Buch, das gelesen wurde, sich aber in einem guten Zustand befindet. Der Einband weist nur sehr ...
Brand
Unbranded
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9781250273109

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
St. Martin's Press
ISBN-10
1250273102
ISBN-13
9781250273109
eBay Product ID (ePID)
15050099310

Product Key Features

Book Title
After the Romanovs : Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle Epoque Through Revolution and War
Number of Pages
336 Pages
Language
English
Topic
Russia & the Former Soviet Union, Europe / France, Social History, Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Political
Publication Year
2022
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Social Science, Biography & Autobiography, History
Author
Helen Rappaport
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1.2 in
Item Weight
18.8 Oz
Item Length
9.3 in
Item Width
6.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2021-044046
Reviews
"Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Traces the Russian encounter with Paris from the city's glittering years as an expat playground before World War I to the grimmer reality of life in exile after the Bolshevik seizure of power." - New York Times Book Review "An engaging group biography...Rappaport is a mistress of the telling detail." --Washington Post "Rappaport presents masterful portraits of these refugees... Rappaport not only crafts a lovingly detailed picture of the City of Light, she also fills its parks and cafés and boulevards with an amazing cast of characters." - Christian Science Monitor "Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." - Shelf Awareness "The depth of the research is impressive, and the scope of the book is ambitious. Rappaport successfully traces those first Belle Époque artists and royals, those who were forced to flee with nothing during the revolution, and their experiences through World War I and beyond."-- Bookreporter.com "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." - Shelf Awareness "One of the effects of the Romanov dynasty's fall in 1917 was a flood of Russian refugees into Europe, including the arrival of aristocrats, artists, writers, and intellectuals who landed in Paris at the height of the city's creative ferment. Helen Rappaport tells their stories with marvelous skill and empathy." - Christian Science Monitor "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Traces the Russian encounter with Paris from the city's glittering years as an expat playground before World War I to the grimmer reality of life in exile after the Bolshevik seizure of power." - New York Times Book Review "An engaging group biography...Rappaport is a mistress of the telling detail." --Washington Post "Vividly evocative and vigorously researched, After the Romanovs offers a bounty of biographies as Rappaport eloquently explores the fraught lives of the uprooted with a welcome blend of candor and compassion." - Fredericksburg Free-Lance Star "Rappaport presents masterful portraits of these refugees... Rappaport not only crafts a lovingly detailed picture of the City of Light, she also fills its parks and cafés and boulevards with an amazing cast of characters." - Christian Science Monitor "Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." - Shelf Awareness "The depth of the research is impressive, and the scope of the book is ambitious. Rappaport successfully traces those first Belle Époque artists and royals, those who were forced to flee with nothing during the revolution, and their experiences through World War I and beyond."-- Bookreporter.com "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews, "Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Traces the Russian encounter with Paris from the city's glittering years as an expat playground before World War I to the grimmer reality of life in exile after the Bolshevik seizure of power." - New York Times Book Review "An engaging group biography...Rappaport is a mistress of the telling detail." --Washington Post "Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." - Shelf Awareness "The depth of the research is impressive, and the scope of the book is ambitious. Rappaport successfully traces those first Belle Époque artists and royals, those who were forced to flee with nothing during the revolution, and their experiences through World War I and beyond."-- Bookreporter.com "One of the effects of the Romanov dynasty's fall in 1917 was a flood of Russian refugees into Europe, including the arrival of aristocrats, artists, writers, and intellectuals who landed in Paris at the height of the city's creative ferment. Helen Rappaport tells their stories with marvelous skill and empathy." - Christian Science Monitor "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, Praise for Helen Rappaport: "Finely researched and elegantly written." -- Washington Post for The Race to Save the Romanovs "An intriguing work of investigative writing." -- New York Journal of Books for The Race to Save the Romanovs "Lively...Rappaport's account works well as an introduction to a complicated year, but is most valuable for its record of the impressions of those who lived through it." -- Wall Street Journal for Caught in the Revolution "Splendid [and] endlessly fascinating." -- The New York Times Book Review for Caught in the Revolution "Superbly evocative...Helen Rappaport beautifully evokes the confusion of the February days." -- Newsday for Caught in the Revolution "A multifaceted account of the 1917 Russian Revolution...gripping and thoroughly researched...[Rappaport brings] the streets and spirit of the early-20th-century Petrograd to life on the page." -- Harper's Bazaar for Caught in the Revolution "Helen Rappaport paints a compelling portrait of the doomed grand duchesses." -- People magazine for The Romanov Sisters "Historian Helen Rappaport reveals new details about the glamorous lives and tragic deaths of the last Russian czar's four daughters." -- Parade magazine for The Romanov Sisters, "Excellent." -- Forbes "Vivid and harrowing." - Air Mail "Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." - Wall Street Journal "Traces the Russian encounter with Paris from the city's glittering years as an expat playground before World War I to the grimmer reality of life in exile after the Bolshevik seizure of power." - New York Times Book Review "An engaging group biography...Rappaport is a mistress of the telling detail." --Washington Post "Harrowing, inspiring and illuminating." -- Miranda Seymour, The Literary Review (UK) "Well-researched, readable and poignant." - The Times (UK) "Vividly evocative and vigorously researched, After the Romanovs offers a bounty of biographies as Rappaport eloquently explores the fraught lives of the uprooted with a welcome blend of candor and compassion." - Fredericksburg Free-Lance Star "Rappaport presents masterful portraits of these refugees... Rappaport not only crafts a lovingly detailed picture of the City of Light, she also fills its parks and cafés and boulevards with an amazing cast of characters." - Christian Science Monitor "Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." - Shelf Awareness "The depth of the research is impressive, and the scope of the book is ambitious. Rappaport successfully traces those first Belle Époque artists and royals, those who were forced to flee with nothing during the revolution, and their experiences through World War I and beyond."-- Bookreporter.com "Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." - Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." - Booklist "Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." - Kirkus Reviews
Dewey Edition
23
Dewey Decimal
944.3610815
Table Of Content
List of illustrations Map of Paris Glossary of Russian Names Chapter 1: La Tournée des Grands Ducs Chapter 2: 'We Really Did Stagger the World' Chapter 3: 'Paris Taught Me, Enriched Me, Beggared Me, Put Me on My Feet' Chapter 4: 'We Had Outlived Our Epoch and Were Doomed' Chapter 5: 'I Never Thought I Would Have to Drag Out My Life As an Émigré' Chapter 6: 'Paris is Full of Russians' Chapter 7: 'How Ruined Russians Earn a Living' Chapter 8: 'We Are Not in Exile, We Are on a Mission' Chapter 9: Emperor Kirill of All the Russias Chapter 10: 'Ubiquitous Intriguers', Spies and Assassins Chapter 11: 'A Far Violin Among Near Balalaikas' Chapter 12: 'I Forever Pity the Exile, a Prisoner, an Invalid' Acknowledgements Notes Bibliography Index
Synopsis
From Helen Rappaport, the New York Times bestselling author of The Romanov Sisters comes After the Romanovs , the story of the Russian aristocrats, artists, and intellectuals who sought freedom and refuge in the City of Light. Paris has always been a city of cultural excellence, fine wine and food, and the latest fashions. But it has also been a place of refuge for those fleeing persecution, never more so than before and after the Russian Revolution and the fall of the Romanov dynasty. For years, Russian aristocrats had enjoyed all that Belle Époque Paris had to offer, spending lavishly when they visited. It was a place of artistic experimentation, such as Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. But the brutality of the Bolshevik takeover forced Russians of all types to flee their homeland, sometimes leaving with only the clothes on their backs. Arriving in Paris, former princes could be seen driving taxicabs, while their wives who could sew worked for the fashion houses, their unique Russian style serving as inspiration for designers like Coco Chanel. Talented intellectuals, artists, poets, philosophers, and writers struggled in exile, eking out a living at menial jobs. Some, like Bunin, Chagall and Stravinsky, encountered great success in the same Paris that welcomed Americans like Fitzgerald and Hemingway. Political activists sought to overthrow the Bolshevik regime from afar, while double agents from both sides plotted espionage and assassination. Others became trapped in a cycle of poverty and their all-consuming homesickness for Russia, the homeland they had been forced to abandon. This is their story.
LC Classification Number
DC718.R8R37 2022

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