Rasputin's Daughter
✍ Scribed by Robert Alexander
- Publisher
- Penguin
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 173 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
EDITORIAL REVIEW: From the author of the national bestseller The Kitchen Boy comes a gripping historical novel about imperial Russia’s most notorious figure Called "brilliant" by USA Today, Robert Alexander’s historical novel The Kitchen Boy swept readers back to the doomed world of the Romanovs. His latest masterpiece once again conjures those turbulent days in a fictional drama of extraordinary depth and suspense. In the wake of the Russian Revolution, Maria Rasputin—eldest of the Rasputin children—recounts her infamous father’s final days, building a breathless narrative of intrigue, excess, and conspiracy that reveals the shocking truth of her father’s end and the identity of those who arranged it. What emerges is a nail-biting, richly textured new take on one of history’s most legendary episodes.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
EDITORIAL REVIEW: **From the author of the national bestseller *The Kitchen Boy* comes a gripping historical novel about imperial Russia’s most notorious figure** Called "brilliant" by *USA Today*, Robert Alexander’s historical novel *The Kitchen Boy* swept readers back to the doomed world
From the author of the national bestseller The Kitchen Boy comes a gripping historical novel about imperial Russia’s most notorious figure Called “brilliant” by USA Today, Robert Alexander’s historical novel The Kitchen Boy swept readers back to the doomed world of the Romanovs. His latest masterpie
EDITORIAL REVIEW: \*\*From the author of the national bestseller \*The Kitchen Boy\* comes a gripping historical novel about imperial Russias most notorious figure\*\* Called "brilliant" by \*USA Today\*, Robert Alexanders historical novel \*The Kitchen Boy\* swept readers back to the do
On a cold, bleak day in 1916, all hell breaks loose in a mining pit in the Ural Mountains. Overcome by a strange paranoia, the miners attack one another, savagely and ferociously. Minutes later, two men—a horrified scientist and Grigory Rasputin, trusted confidant of the tsar—hit a detonator, blowin