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Book Reviews of Russian Winter

Russian Winter
Russian Winter
Author: Daphne Kalotay
ISBN-13: 9780061962165
ISBN-10: 0061962163
Publication Date: 9/1/2010
Pages: 480
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 17

3.8 stars, based on 17 ratings
Publisher: Harper
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

cathyskye avatar reviewed Russian Winter on + 2267 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
First Line: The afternoon was so cold, so relentlessly gray, few pedestrians passed the long island of trees dividing Commonwealth Avenue, and even little dogs, shunted along impatiently, wore thermal coats and offended expressions.

Nina Revskaya, prima ballerina of the Bolshoi Ballet in Stalinist Russia, is spending her remaining years in Boston. Crippled by arthritis and feeling that her body has betrayed her, Nina has become a bitter, secretive old woman. When a man shows up on her doorstep with a piece of jewelry and questions, Nina puts her entire jewelry collection on the auction block rather than part with the answers to his questions. Little does Nina know, but protecting her secrets won't be that easy. Drew Brooks, an associate at the Boston auction house, is researching the history of Nina's jewels, and Grigori Solodin, the man on her doorstep, will not take no for an answer.

When you get right down to it, there's not all that much that's new in the plot of Russian Winter. Girl dances. Girl falls in love. Girl suffers heartbreak and betrayal. Girl runs away and begins a new life. But it's what Kalotay weaves into this plot that makes this novel special.

In many ways, Kalotay's book was right up my alley. I enjoy reading about ballet, and jewelry collections and their histories can fascinate me. Both of these things were very satisfying in Russian Winter, but the best piece of all was showing life in the Russia of Stalin-- where a prima ballerina lives in a communal apartment shared with her husband, mother-in-law and thirty-three other people. Each family has one room. There is one telephone for all. There is one toilet and one washroom for all. There is one kitchen with three stoves and six tables. It is a world where secrets can kill you, so you learn to lock away pieces of your soul until the lock rusts and the key no longer works.

Once characters like Nina are seen in the setting in which they became adults, they change right before your eyes and become multi-dimensional. It doesn't matter that the basic plot has been used before. This may be Kalotay's first novel, but I hope it isn't her last.
reviewed Russian Winter on + 1438 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A famous ballerina is selling her jewelry to benefit the Boston ballet. Nina Revskya is ill, in pain, and confined to a wheelchair. However, her decision to auction her jewels opens past memories that she would prefer to forget. The novel moves back and forth between her past and the present. The present is likewise divided between Nina's thoughts and emotions and that of the young woman, Drew Brooks, who is researching and evaluating the collection plus the reactions of a professor, Grigori Solodin, who believes that he is related to Nina.

Nina recalls her experiences as a child, later as an aspiring ballerina, and finally as a an accomplished and well revered ballerina. Even at this point she is poor, hungry and always repairing costumes, tights and ballet shoes. When she falls in love with the wealthy poet, Viktor Elsin, the two marry they still must live with his mother, who dislikes her and ridicules her.

As Nina's story unfolds, Viktor's best friend is arrested and sent away. Nina's friend, Vera, is devastated as she is in love with the friend. Nina becomes more and more distrustful of those around her and focuses primarily on dance. Viktor wants to have a child but Nina is afraid to bring one into this world. She and Vera quarrel and avoid each other. However, there is so much to the relationships and her marriage than one can share in a few lines.

Back in the present, Grigori Solonin owns an amber necklace that he believes belongs with a set that Nina has listed for sale. In his attempt to discover if it is and if he is related to Nina he finds himself attracted to Drew and another story line evolves.

I loved the novel and the bouncing back and forth between characters and time frames only seemed to me to enhance the story. It's a wonderful read well documented by the author's research. While these comments may seem disconnected it is difficult to share impressions about this read without giving away too much. Suffice it to say that this is a most enjoyable novel that I highly recommend.
reviewed Russian Winter on + 73 more book reviews
Loved this book, up until the HIGHLY unsatisfying ending. Questions weren't really answered; it was abrupt & took what was a FABULOUS story & made it feel unkempt. Worth reading I guess, but I wish I didn't love it so much... until it (didn't) end...
reviewed Russian Winter on + 17 more book reviews
Why is the pendant worn backwardsand which woman wears it?

The cover of Russian Winter beguiled me, but did not answer the many questions that hammered at my brain as Ninas story unfolded. I paid diligent attention to the carefully spun-out clues in the novel and was spellbound until the end. Sometimes we savor a bookread a bit, then put it away until tomorrow so that it may be pondered. Not so with Russian Winter. I was swept away and contentedly disconnected from the rest of my life for the hours I spent within its pages.

I reveled in author Daphne Kalotays use of language. She juxtaposes present day Boston with post WW II Soviet Union where artists struggle with their private turmoil and fears behind the iron curtain. Her flashbacks are expertly cast in the present tense. So much of what is beautiful in this worldballet, poetry, music, love, creative expression, hopeis intertwined with betrayal, fear, loss, poor health. Detailed descriptions of the jewelry to be auctioned are uniquely placed between chapter headings. Kalotay has a way of bringing simple images to life with phrases like a squadron of hairpins.

Dancers must remember everything. Retired ballerina Nina Rebskaya, who has defected to the United States and seeks to sell her jewel collection to benefit the Boston ballet, suffers such a fate. Nina, who visualized the optimum performance of the next step in her choreography as she felt the floor beneath her feet, becomes the retired benefactress, body rigid and wheelchair-bound, tracing the lines of the past in her memories.

The career of a ballerina is ephemeral but the value of a gemstone endures. Intrigue seduces. Art is transforming. Ponder all of this in the captivating novel, Russian Winter.

Reviewed by Holly Weiss, author of Crestmont
http://www.hollyweiss.com
junie avatar reviewed Russian Winter on + 630 more book reviews
I really wasn't sure how to rate this book since I had mixed emotions while reading it. It started with an 80 year old former Russian Prima Ballerina who defected to the West and now is wheelchair bound, probably due to arthritis. She is an angry old woman who lost everyone she loved and lives in the past. She decides to auction her jewels and meets Drew, an associate from the Boston Auction House, who tries to befriend her.

The story unfolds as Grigori, a Russian professor, hears about Nina's amber bracelet and earrings and he says he has a matching necklace to complete the set. He believes he is related to Nina and is trying to find his biological parents and thinks she can help, but she refuses to see him. He gives his necklace to Drew to add to the amber set, and a loving relationship develops between them.

Toward the end of the book, it became exciting, non stop reading as I raced to find out what happens, however it ended abruptly and unsatisfactorily and I was disappointed and felt cheated!