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The Porcelain Doll
The Porcelain Doll | Kristen Loesch
1 post | 1 read
'She was called Kukolka,' he says. Little doll. It's an unwelcome reminder of Mum's porcelain prisoners back in London. Of all the things we could have brought with us from Russia - and we weren't able to bring very much - she chose them. Rosie's only inheritance from her reclusive mother is a book of Russian fairy tales. But there is another story lurking between the lines. Not so long ago, Rosie lived peacefully in Moscow and her mother told fairy tales at bedtime. But one summer night, all that came abruptly to an end when her father and sister were gunned down. Years later, Rosie is a doctoral student at Oxford, with a fiance who knows nothing of her former life and an ailing, alcoholic mother lost to a notebook full of eerie, handwritten little stories. Desperate for answers to the questions that have tormented her, Rosie returns to her homeland and uncovers a devastating family history which spans the 1917 Revolution, the siege of Leningrad, Stalin's purges and beyond. At the heart of those answers stands a young noblewoman, Tonya, as pretty as a porcelain doll, whose actions reverberate across the century .
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review
JillR
The Porcelain Doll | Kristen Loesch
post image
Mehso-so

This was really quite slow and I was disappointed I wasn‘t really feeling it. Then we hit 1917 and the Revolution, and suddenly I‘m invested. Then it takes another turn and people‘s legs are being eaten and, well, that‘s not where I thought we were going. It then veered off into dreamlike scenes and I confess it lost me. Parts of this book I very much wanted to read, others not so much, leaving me feeling disjointed and a little confused.