Thursday, March 23, 2023

The Last Russian Doll

My March Book of the Month selection was The Last Russian Doll by Kristen Loesch (the other options were The London Seance Society by Sarah Penner, Weyward by Emilia Hart, The Soulmate by Sally Hepworth, Rootless by Krystle Zarah Appiah, The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi, and Lone Women by Victor LaValle). I have been defaulting to the thriller for the past several months so I thought it was time to pick a historical novel and this is a good one. In 1991 Rosie (Raisa) and her mother have been living in England since they defected from the Soviet Union in 1977 after her father and sister were brutally murdered. She has always wanted to understand what happened on that fateful day so, when when she finds a cryptic clue about her family's past inside a porcelain doll after her mother's sudden death, she contrives to return to the Soviet Union as a research assistant for a famous author. In 1915 Antonina (Tonya) is trapped in a loveless marriage to a wealthy nobleman in St. Petersburg who treats her like the porcelain doll he had made especially for her. She begins a passionate and scandalous affair with Valentin, one of her husband's workers, at the beginning of the Bolshevik revolution but events conspire to separate them. The narrative alternates between the two timelines as Rosie's investigation leads her to Tonya. I really loved the mystery aspect of this novel because every single clue that Rosie finds leads her to another mystery, just like a nesting Matryoshka doll, and, even though I knew the two storylines would eventually converge, I was completely engaged until the final resolution. As someone who loves Russian history, culture, literature, and music, I was fascinated by all of the historical references to the 1917 revolution, the Russian Civil War, Stalin's purges, the siege of Leningrad during World War II, and the fall of communism. I also loved the use of Russian fairy tales at the beginning of every chapter because they very cleverly inform what is happening in the main plot. All of the characters are interesting and well-developed but I especially enjoyed Tonya's arc because she begins the novel as little more than an ornament without autonomy but she is transformed by events into an incredibly resourceful and resilient woman. She is the perfect personification of Russia itself (beautiful but formidable) and I was enthralled by her journey. This is a beautifully written multi-generational saga set against the backdrop of 20th century Russian history so I literally couldn't help but love it. This is definitely my favorite book of 2023 so far and I highly recommend it!

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