Stalins Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva
By (Author) Rosemary Sullivan
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
20th June 2016
30th June 2016
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
947.0842092
Paperback
624
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 49mm
530g
Compassionate and compelling, this is not a political story but a quest for love in the heart of darkness Simon Sebag Montefiore
A biography on an epic scale, with a combination of tragedy and history worthy of a Russian novel Independent
Superbly well told Sunday Times
Who was Svetlana Alliluyeva
A little girl, her fathers only daughter, his little sparrow; instructed to bury her secrets in her heart by her mother, who shot herself soon after.
An observer as her relatives were mercilessly killed and her first love exiled.
A woman who tore through relationships with men, joined and abandoned various religions, and became the most famous defector to the United States.
The victim of an inescapable truth: You are Stalins daughter. . . . You cant live your own life. You cant live any life. You exist only in reference to a name.
A tremendously exciting and stimulating biography Never have I read a biography that reminded my more of a picaresque novel, with its heroine bouncing like a pinball from one location to another, from one bizarre situation to another Her life may have been a mess, but this masterful biography shows that it was her mess, and a magnificent mess, too, in its own particular way Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday *****
It takes a fine biographer to capture a woman as parti-coloured as this, and Sullivan has produced a delicate, balanced and unforgettably good portrait of a courageous and magnificent woman Daily Telegraph *****
What would it mean to be the child of one of the most feared mass murderers in history Rosemary Sullivans compelling biography of Svetlana Alliluyeva, Stalins only daughter, makes an admirable attempt at an answerThe remarkable thing about Stalins daughter was not that she was imperious, infuriating, batty at times, but that she had survived at all and survived, as this entertaining book shows, with her dignity and integrity in tact Sunday Times
Was Stalin a monster Oh, yes. The question that threads through this lively intelligent book is a more interesting one, though: can you live with the idea that you are the daughter of a monster The Times
Reading this extensively researched book it is impossible not to feel for a woman who grew up the political prisoner of my fathers name Independent on Sunday
Sullivan controls her widespread canvas and large cast in exemplary fashion. Svetlana was chaotic, exasperating, difficult to the point of impossible but never boring. She was one of the few credits that you can attribute to Stalin Book of the Week, Daily Mail
A biography on an epic scale, with a combination of tragedy and history worthy of a Russian novel. She recreates with clarity and compassion the life of a brave woman Independent
A singular story, brilliantly told Daily Telegraph
ROSEMARY SULLIVAN, the author of fifteen books, is best known for her recent biography Stalin's Daughter. Published in twenty-three countries, it won the Biographers International Organization Plutarch Award and was a finalist for the PEN /Bograd Weld Award for Biography and the National Books Critics Circle Award. Her book Villa Air-Bel was awarded the Canadian Society for Yad Vashem Award in Holocaust History. She is a professor emeritus at the University of Toronto and has lectured in Canada, the U.S., Europe, India, and Latin America.