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The Silent Land

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Spanning 80 tumultuous years, the incredible story of a peasant girl who became the Red Princess of the Russian Revolution.

Anna Mayakovsky is now a penniless old woman living in London, but no one can take away the vivid memories of her past: the Count who lifted her out of poverty; the Count's son, Misha, whose baby she bore; Paul, the ruthless factory owner who became her lover – and her deadliest enemy; Sasha, the tough but gentle peasant who converted her to revolution. And her aristocratic husband whom she adored, but could never love as completely as a woman should love her man.

Now Anna finds she has one more battle ahead of her: her great-granddaughters Jennifer and Sonia wish to lock her away in an institution. Anna knows this would kill her. She will have to fight back . . .
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    • Booklist

      June 1, 2016
      When a woman's body is found in the most expensive suite at Whitebridge's ritzy Royal Victoria Hotel, the case falls to DCI Monika Paniatowski and her team. There's no identification on the woman or in her room, but the hotel manager says she registered as Mary Edwards and paid cash up front. This slightly unusual fact, combined with the discovery that the clothes in her closet were two distinctly different typessome cheap, some very expensiveleads Monika to conclude that the woman wanted to disguise herself and perhaps hide the real reason she was in Whitebridge. Eventually, Monika's sidekick, Jack Crane, digs out the clue that finally unlocks the puzzle when he discovers that the victim had visited the Whitebridge library to research a decades-old murder case. As the clues finally start to make sense, a tragic story is revealed, and the victim is finally avenged in a most unexpected way. A gripping plot, twists aplenty, good pacing, and the tough yet vulnerable Monika make this an engrossing read in Spencer's British procedural series set in the 1970s.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2016
      Departing from her usual British police procedurals, Spencer offers up a sweeping historical saga set in early twentieth-century Russia and featuring a woman, Anna Mayakovsky, who rose from her poverty-stricken peasant background to become a Russian princess and a Bolshevik revolutionary. Told from Anna's perspective as an old woman living in London, the story begins with Anna's difficult early life tilling the land on the Russian steppes. It then moves to the day she was taken into the house of the wealthy landowner who, unbeknownst to Anna, was her natural father. So began the agony for Anna of being torn between a life of luxury and her peasant roots. Anna's story then moves to her first lovea man who will later become a fiery revolutionaryand her marriage to Prince Mayakovsky, a man who harbors a dangerous secret. Anna's conversion from society princess to Russian revolutionary, allusions to an intriguing life after the Russian Revolution, and her struggles to remain independent in her old age add up to a mesmerizing page-turner that will appeal to fans of historical sagas.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2016
      An aging Russian princess looks back on her life.As Anna Mayakovsky shuffles along Kilburn Lane, on good days as far as Harrow Road, her greatest fear is that her great-granddaughters, Sonia and Jennifer, will whisk her out of her tiny flat and put her in a home. An unworthy end, she reflects, for someone who once dined with the Romanovs. Although she was born a peasant, a local nobleman who owned a vast estate near her village approached Anna's father one day and, for a few rubles, was allowed to bring her home to be raised along with his children, Misha and Mariamna. Anna doesn't know why she's there, and while the Count is kind to her, Countess Olga, his wife, taunts her mercilessly about her humble origins. Eventually strong, generous Prince Konstantin Mayakovsky takes comely Anna, already pregnant with Misha's child, to his palace in St. Petersburg to become his wife. As the Princess Mayakovsky, Anna becomes the friend and confidante of Czar Nicholas and the Empress Alexandra (although privately she thinks them terribly bourgeois). She becomes the mother to her son, Nicholas, named for her husband's patron. She also becomes a Bolshevik spy. Later, as the Revolution unfolds, Lenin and Stalin rely on her good counsel in their quest to transform Russia. Anna's sexual adventures are as prodigious as her political exploits. After her initiation in carnal delights by Misha, she takes as her lover dreamy revolutionary Sasha Krasnov, who's eventually exiled to Siberia. She also beds boorish factory owner Peter Nechaev, who despite his exploitation of his mill workers rocks her world. Rasputin invites her to "Take the staff of my love in your mouth" but ultimately punks out. She gives birth to a second child, Tania, but loses her to the growing chaos that envelops her homeland. Anna Karenina as rewritten by Jackie Collins.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      An aging Russian princess looks back on her life.As Anna Mayakovsky shuffles along Kilburn Lane, on good days as far as Harrow Road, her greatest fear is that her great-granddaughters, Sonia and Jennifer, will whisk her out of her tiny flat and put her in a home. An unworthy end, she reflects, for someone who once dined with the Romanovs. Although she was born a peasant, a local nobleman who owned a vast estate near her village approached Anna's father one day and, for a few rubles, was allowed to bring her home to be raised along with his children, Misha and Mariamna. Anna doesn't know why she's there, and while the Count is kind to her, Countess Olga, his wife, taunts her mercilessly about her humble origins. Eventually strong, generous Prince Konstantin Mayakovsky takes comely Anna, already pregnant with Misha's child, to his palace in St. Petersburg to become his wife. As the Princess Mayakovsky, Anna becomes the friend and confidante of Czar Nicholas and the Empress Alexandra (although privately she thinks them terribly bourgeois). She becomes the mother to her son, Nicholas, named for her husband's patron. She also becomes a Bolshevik spy. Later, as the Revolution unfolds, Lenin and Stalin rely on her good counsel in their quest to transform Russia. Anna's sexual adventures are as prodigious as her political exploits. After her initiation in carnal delights by Misha, she takes as her lover dreamy revolutionary Sasha Krasnov, who's eventually exiled to Siberia. She also beds boorish factory owner Peter Nechaev, who despite his exploitation of his mill workers rocks her world. Rasputin invites her to "Take the staff of my love in your mouth" but ultimately punks out. She gives birth to a second child, Tania, but loses her to the growing chaos that envelops her homeland. Anna Karenina as rewritten by Jackie Collins. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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