The Kitchen Boy: A Novel of the Last Tsar by Robert Alexander

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    (Paperback - Reprint)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0142003816
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Pub. Date: January 2004
    • Condition:

    Comments from the Seller: 2003 Paperbound Good-See Description Paperbound Good condition. Slight wear.

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    Synopsis

    Drawing from decades of work, travel, and research in Russia, Robert Alexander re-creates the tragic, perennially fascinating story of the final days of Russian monarchs Nicholas and Alexandra as seen through the eyes of the Romanov's young kitchen boy, Leonka.

    BookPage Review

    In the turbulent early days of revolutionary Russia, Bolshevik agents herded
    the deposed Tsar Nicholai II, his family and aides into the basement of a
    Siberian house and executed them all in a blaze of gunfire. Details of what
    happened that fateful night have taken decades to emerge, reaching a
    terrible climax with the 1991 excavation of a mass grave believed to be the
    one in which some of the members of the Romanov family were buried.

    Writer Robert Alexander, a fluent Russian speaker who studied in Leningrad,
    became fascinated with an obscure reference in the Empress Alexandra's
    personal journal shortly before her death, noting that their kitchen boy had
    been sent away. This brief reference from a forgotten 1918 diary took root
    in Alexander's imagination and, after much research, blossomed as his new
    novel The Kitchen Boy. This intriguing work of speculative historical
    fiction re-creates the last days of the tsar through the eyes of the young
    Leonka, who recalls how he secretly returned to the Siberian house that
    served as the Romanovs' prison and witnessed their execution.

    The novel successfully maintains an intense atmo-sphere of peril and
    suspense despite the reader's foreknowledge of the Romanovs' fate. The
    calamity is heightened by the fierce, almost primal protectiveness the
    parents showed toward their children—who nevertheless would die with
    them—invoking compassion for the royal family as people rather than dusty
    national symbols.

    Despite the sympathetic portrayal of the tsar and his family, Alexander
    doesn't ignore the judgment of history. As Leonka notes, however
    well-intentioned Nicholai and his empress may have been, their rule over
    Russia was a legacy of war, revolution, corruption and oppression. But the
    thuggish Bolshevik revolutionaries fare no better under the novel's
    scrutiny.

    The Kitchen Boy is a fascinating and suspenseful glimpse of a tempestuous
    but shadowy period in Russian history. It's also a moving portrait of a
    family that, despite their legendary role in world events, proved in the end
    to be as mortal as the rest of us.

    Gregory Harris is a writer, editor and technology consultant in
    Indianapolis.

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    Biography

    ROBERT ALEXANDER has traveled to Russia for nearly thirty years. Born and raised in Chicago, Alexander now lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    Customer Reviews

    Just Leaves You Begging For Moreby Alex96AR

    Reader Rating:
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    11/28/2009: The Kitchen Boy is amazing, absolutely amazing! It's the story about when the Russian Imperial family was thrown into exile some of their servants from the palace camewith them, willingly. But along with the Empress's maid, the Tsar's footman, the Tsarevich's doctor, and the cook came a little boy named Leonka who has never been in close contact with let alone in the same boy as the Romanovs. He does though become friends with the young royal prince Aleksei as he starts to earn the trust of the entire family things become more dangerous as the Kommandant starts to grow suspicious could Leonka become one buried with the Romanovs?

    I Also Recommend: Rasputin's Daughter.

    One of the best books I ever read.by grandma_bert

    Reader Rating:
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    07/01/2009: Even though you know the truth of the story, this book is so well written that it makes for engrossing reading. Do not put this book aside when you are halfway through and think you know the ending. Believe me....just don't do it.

    Truly one of the best books I ever read.


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