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Review Excerpts
The Washington Post – February 16, 2006
“For readers who like their juicy scandals topped with a hearty dollop of
history, Alexander serves up a satisfying portrait of a court in its last
throes of decadence and intrigue.”
Booklist – November 2, 2005
“In The Kitchen Boy, Alexander creatively imagined an answer to the mystery
of the last days of the Russian imperial family during the revolution... Now
he ventures into the never-cleared-up last days of Gregory Rasputin…
Employing the fast pace of a thriller and the ability to make a remote
historical episode personal to the reader, Alexander views events from the
perspective of Rasputin’s elder daughter, Maria… The author lends great
understanding to the time and to actual historical figures.”
-- Brad Hooper
Publishers Weekly – October 31, 2005
“In an endeavor similar to his debut novel, The Kitchen Boy, Alexander
couples extensive research and poetic license, this time turning his
enthusiasm toward perhaps the most intriguing player in the collapse of the
Russian dynasty: Rasputin. This eyebrow-raising account of the final week of
the notorious mystic's life is set in Petrograd in December 1916 and
narrated by Rasputin's fiery teenage daughter, Maria... The combination of
Alexander's research and his rich characterizations produces an engaging
historical fiction that offers a Rasputin who is neither beast nor saint,
but merely, compellingly human.”
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