Best of
Russia

1930

Year One of the Russian Revolution


Victor Serge - 1930
    '[A] masterpiece of reportorial thoroughness, painstaking research, and serious reflection.' Edward Said

Theatre Street


Tamara Karsavina - 1930
    Her recreation of those days, with Diaghilev, Benois, Bakst, and Roerich working in one room and Stravinsky and Fokine squabbling next door, is simply yet effectively contrived. The story ends with grim recollections of Russia at war and then in the grip of revolution, and Karsavina's own dramatic escape to England. Diaghilev died after Karsavina had finished writing her book, but this edition reproduces an addition chapter of her memories and impressions of this great man of the theatre.

Education Of A Princess A Memoir By Marie, Grand Duchess Of Russia


Marie, Grand Duchess of Russia - 1930
    Translated from the French and Russian under the editorial supervision of Russell Lord. To clarify the confusing Romanov family: this Marie was the granddaughter of Czar Alexander II, the daughter of Grand Duke Paul, and the cousin of Tsar Nicholas. Her brother, Prince Dmitri, was one of the plotters against Rasputin. He was exiled for that, to the Persian frontier, which saved his life when the roundup of the Imperial family began. These are the memoirs of her childhood, a glittering version of solitary confinement, and young adult life. Her father was banished for marrying without the Czar's permission, which left Marie and her brother to be brought up by her uncle, the military governor of Moscow. After her uncle's assassination in 1905, her aunt arranged a marriage with a Swedish prince whom Marie saw a few times before the wedding. The marriage was disastrous, and a divorce was arranged, quickly and quietly. Marie's young son stayed in Sweden. Charity was an acceptable occupation for the women of the aristocracy, but Marie became a qualified nurse and spent much of the early part of WWI in field hospitals. The last part of the book contains her account of the final tense days of the Romanovs, her second marriage, and her escape through the Ukraine.

The Magyars in the Ninth Century


C.A. Macartney - 1930
    AD 896).

Freak Show


Andre Sobol - 1930
    Nine pieces of expressionistic fiction (a novella, three novelettes, and five short stories) depicting contemporary Russian life, mostly in Moscow. The author died in 1926 at the age of 38. This appears to be his only work that has been translated into English. It was reprinted by Hyperion Press in 1973.