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The Winter Palace

Average rating: 4/5

Based on 28 ratings

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The Winter Palace

by Eva Stachniak

Doubleday Canada | January 3, 2012 | Trade Paperback

Behind every great ruler lies a betrayal. Eva Stachniak''s novel sweeps readers into the passionate, intimate, and treacherous world of Catherine the Great, revealing Russia''s greatest matriarch from her earliest days in court, where the most valuable currency was the secrets of nobility and the most dangerous weapon to wield was ambition.
 
Two young women, caught in the landscape of shifting allegiances, navigate the treacherous waters of palace intrigue. Barbara is a servant who will become one of Russia''s most cunning royal spies. Sophia is a pretty, naive German duchess who will become Catherine the Great. For readers of superb historical fiction, Eva Stachniak captures in glorious detail the opulence of royalty and the perilous loyalties of the Russian court.

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Reviews

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    Rating: 2/5

    A bit disappointing

    Laurie Nason

    2 weeks ago

    I downloaded the preview for this book on my Kobo and was looking forward to reading it. It was one of the rare books that I couldn't wait to finish so that I could read something else. It's not that it didn't flow well - it just lack excitement. This book could have easily been so much better.

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      helpful to you?

    Rating: 2/5

    Disappointing . . .

    ariess

    5 weeks ago

    O.M.G. This was the never-ending book. The title was totally misleading, it was not about Catherine the Great, rather it was about an orphaned Polish immigrant who served at the Winter Palace. It should have been titled "A story with Catherine the Great in it, but she really doesn't play a major role" . . . but I guess that was a little too wordy.

    The characters were flat and never fully developed and the writing, oh the writing. If short, choppy, fragmented sentences and disconnected paragraphs work for you than you will not have a problem reading it, however if these aggravate you as much as they do me, it might be difficult to get through the novel. The facts are great and well researched but the style of writing leaves much to be desired.

    As for its rating . . . well it actually falls somewhere between 2.5 and 3 . . . there were some decent parts among the rubble. Unfortunately this book was a major disappointment and I do not strongly recommend it.

    Please visit my blog for my full review and my additional thoughts and comments: http://bookchateau.blogspot.ca/2012/04/winter-palace-eva-stachniak.html

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 4/5

    Couldn't put it down!!

    Gaye

    2 months ago

    For me, "The Winter Palace" was a page turner and I carried the book around with me so I could read a paragraph or two whenever I had a free minute. I was disappointed to see I have to wait almost a year for the sequel to be released. I liked
    Eva Stachniak's writing style very much and ordered her "Necessary Lies" and am looking forward to receiving it. I should point out the way Eva Stachniak"s protagonist
    is neither Elizabeth or Catherine, for me, enriched the story
    and made it even more enjoyable as you are rooting for another character, Barbara, who does not have the power or options of the other women. At times, Barbara is treading a very fine line
    and is juggling her position with the royal women - though her
    loyalty is with Catherine. A very enjoyable read!

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 3/5

    A Passionate Saga

    Toni Osborne

    • Top Book Reviewer

    2 months ago

    This historical fiction is an imaginative recreation of the Russian court from 1743 to 1764, an epic story of three amazing women who lived at the palace. We are introduced to Empress Elizabeth, the youngest surviving daughter of Peter the Great, German princess Sophie and in a shrewd move the author invented a fictional character, Barbara (Varvara) an orphaned Polish girl who became a court spy for both rulers. This story is essentially hers and her narration takes us behind every closed door in Elizabeth's court.

    In 1744, Princess Sophie of Prussia comes to the Russian court for her betrothal to the Grand Duke Peter (Elizabeth's nephew and heir to the throne). Sophie converts to Russian Orthodoxy and after her wedding becomes Catherine, the Grand Duchess. Sophie soon realizes she needs an insider, someone to be her confidante, giving her a heads up thus protecting her against those who are determined to see her fail. With Varvara by her side, Sophie/Catherine becomes a legend, surviving trials, tribulations, and the coup that allows her to rise and assume the throne of all of Russia.

    This passionate saga captures the atmosphere of eighteenth century Russia exceptionally well stressing the importance of loyalty, the key to a powerful monarchy. Success is often determined by a person's ability to conspire, spy and manipulate everyone around you. The reader is slowly drawn into the day to day life of Imperialist Russia examining the intrigues and extravagance from the point of view of a servant, at times this description was a little over done. I was disappointed at first to see Catherine being portrayed as a hazy and opaque figure and never really achieving the importance of a leading figure then I remembered that Varvara is the prime player.

    Just when Catherine's dreams are about to materialize and my interest was at a high point the end came to a screeching halt. Apparently in the next installment "The Empire of the Nights" we will see things from Catherine's point of view and maybe this will help to paint a more complete picture of the times.

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From the Publisher

Behind every great ruler lies a betrayal. Eva Stachniak''s novel sweeps readers into the passionate, intimate, and treacherous world of Catherine the Great, revealing Russia''s greatest matriarch from her earliest days in court, where the most valuable currency was the secrets of nobility and the most dangerous weapon to wield was ambition.
 
Two young women, caught in the landscape of shifting allegiances, navigate the treacherous waters of palace intrigue. Barbara is a servant who will become one of Russia''s most cunning royal spies. Sophia is a pretty, naive German duchess who will become Catherine the Great. For readers of superb historical fiction, Eva Stachniak captures in glorious detail the opulence of royalty and the perilous loyalties of the Russian court.

About the Author

EVA STACHNIAK was born in Wroclaw, Poland. She came to Canada in 1981 and has worked for Radio Canada International and Sheridan College, where she taught English and Humanities. Her first short story, "Marble Heroes," was published by the Antigonish Review in 1994, and her debut novel, Necessary Lies, won the Amazon.com/Books in Canada First Novel Award in 2000. Stachniak is also the author of Garden of Venus. She lives in Toronto.

Bookclub Guide

1. The novel starts with a quotation from a letter the future Catherine the Great wrote to the British Ambassador, Sir Hanbury-Williams: Three people who never leave her room, and who do not know about one another, inform me of what is going on, and will not fail to acquaint me when the crucial moment arrives.

What does this sentence tell us about the future empress of Russia?

2. Varvara is an immigrant to Russia. She is an outsider in many other ways, a tradesman's daughter among aristocrats, a Roman Catholic among Orthodox Christians, a Polish wife of a Russian officer. How does she cope with the need to belong? How much is she willing to sacrifice for a sense of home?

3. Catherine too is an immigrant. In 17th century Russia, keen on developing its national identity, her Prussian blood is suspect. How does Catherine cope with xenophobia? How does she use it to her advantage?

4. Much of the novel is about power. The characters crave it, gain it, lose it. How are the principal women characters: Varvara, Catherine, and Elizabeth defined by their understanding of what power is? What in their background made them think that their definition of power is the right one?

And what do men in the novel think of power? Powerful women? Their role in a country ruled by a woman?

5. Why is power so important to these three women? What do they wish to do with it? How much are they willing to sacrifice for it? And, when they finally have it, what do they actually do?

6. Motherhood is another pivotal issue in the novel. Elizabeth wishes to be a surrogate mother to her nephew, Peter, and later to Catherine's son Paul. Catherine and Varvara give birth to their own children. What does motherhood mean to each of them? How does it transform them? Why?

7. Darya and Paul are two children whose births we witness in the novel. How does their childhood differ? What is expected of them? What emotional future do envisage for them and why?

8. Love, lust and marriage are always present at the Winter Palace. How do the three principal characters, Varvara, Catherine and Elizabeth, understand them?  How do they use love, lust, and marriage to further their own needs? Why?

9. The Russian court is the backdrop of the novel. Historical sources confirm that spying was ubiquitous there. How does being a spy affect Varvara? How does having spies affect Elizabeth and Catherine? How does being watched affect the lives of the courtiers?

10. Loyalty is another important theme in The Winter Palace-national, political, personal.  How does each of the three main characters define loyalty? How does this definition affect their actions?

11. Peter the Great has transformed Russia. Is his presence felt in the novel? In what ways? What is your sense of Russia under Elizabeth and later under Catherine? Why does the country feel snubbed by the rest of Europe? How do Catherine and Elizabeth play to this sense of rejection? What are their visions for Russia? Do they really differ that much?

12. Toward the end of the novel Catherine decides to reassess her own needs as an empress and her obligations as a friend and lover. Is she justified in this decision? How does she do it? What are Varvara's expectations of their friendship and what is Catherine's assessment of it?

13. The novel ends when the reign of Catherine II has just begun. How much has Catherine sacrificed for her position? Is it possible to predict from her behavior as Grand Duchess what kind of a ruler is she going to be? What are her best qualities? Her worst?

14. Varvara leaves Catherine's court. In the last chapter of the novel she meets one of Catherine's former lovers, recently elected the king of Poland. What are Varvara's feelings about Stanislaw's prospects? What does she fear? Why?

15. The novel ends with the image of Varvara beginning to tell Darya the story of her life in Russia. How much do you think she will tell her child? What will she keep to herself? Why?

Trade Paperback

464 Pages, 6.34 x 9.24 x 1.26 in

January 3, 2012

Doubleday Canada

English


038566656X
9780385666565

From the Critics

"The Winter Palace is indeed as gorgeous, opulent and lush as its titular location."
-National Post
 
"At the same time baroque and intimate, worldly and domestic, wildly strange and soulfully familiar, The Winter Palace offers a flickering glimpse of history through the gauze of a deft entertainment."
 -The Washington Post
 
"[B]rilliant, bold . . . This superb biographical epic proves the Tudors don't have a monopoly on marital scandal, royal intrigue, or feminine triumph."
-Booklist

"Eva Stachniak''s new novel should establish her as a pre-eminent writer of historical fiction. ... The Winter Palace is seamless in its depiction of a place and time…. what Stachniak has given us is not history, but a dramatic recreation of what the witnesses to history actually manage to see and do."
-Quill & Quire

"Stachniak captures dramatic moments with flair, and the Russian Imperial court-with its fox-fur blankets, gilded furniture, and carafes of cherry vodka-appears in glorious splendor. This superb biographical epic proves the Tudors don't have a monopoly on marital scandal, royal intrigue, or feminine triumph."
-Booklist

"Stachniak sets the scene extravagantly with details of sumptuous meals, elaborate wardrobes, and cunning palace politics. Longtime readers of English and French historical novels will delight in this relatively unsung dynasty and the familiar hallmarks of courtly intrigue."
-Library Journal
 
"In The Winter Palace, Stachniak creates a story filled with political intrigue, secret affairs and dread diseases. . . . Stachniak has faithfully reproduced the historical story of Catherine."
-Vancouver Sun

"Rich in detail, filled with vivid characters, recounted in seamless prose, The Winter Palace follows the suspenseful journey of two forceful young women--Varvara, the 'tongue' whose task it is to spy on a penniless young princess from Germany brought to court to provide a heir for Mother Russia, and Catherine, groomed to become the future wife of the next Czar, the socially clumsy and dull Peter. The Winter Palace is as luminescent as a Fabergé egg, as salty as caviar and as heady as vodka. Eva Stachniak has re-created an absolutely believable world of the Russian Imperial Court and the character of the young Catherine, the ambitious, ill-used, manipulated girl who became one of the greatest female monarchs the world has ever seen. This book will grab you by the throat on page one and not let you go until the last page.  The characters will stay with you forever."
-Roberta Rich, author of The Midwife of Venice

 "The Winter Palace evokes the dark, glittering world of the Russian court. I loved my reader's place behind the eyes of the servant girl Varvara, engaged in her perilous role as confidante to the young Catherine the Great. Rich with fascinating details of St. Petersburg, Eva Stachniak's novel is an illuminating lesson and a delicious read."
-Beth Powning, author of The Sea Captain's Wife
 
"Spies and lovers lurk everywhere, while brilliantly bedecked royals indulge their every whim."
-Publishers Weekly
 
"This novel is literary sable to sink into on a cold winter''s night: luxurious and elegant, gilded with details, yet piercing in its depiction of the flamboyant decadence of the Russian court, and the tumultuous rise to power of Catherine the Great, as seen through the eyes of a scheming lady in waiting and spy. Once you enter the glorious, dangerous world of The Winter Palace, you will never want to leave."
-C.W. Gortner, author of The Confessions of Catherine de Medici
 
"A wonderful tale of the Imperial Russia court in all its glittering glory.  Eva Stachniak vividly brings to life the early years of the meek young bride who would become the terrifying fascinating Catherine the Great." 
-Kate Williams, author of England's Mistress and Becoming Queen
 
"Fantastic, bold, colourful, assured and wonderful writing - and what a story! An outstanding book, magical, beautiful with writing as crisp and fine and breathtaking as a Russian winter." 
 -Manda Scott, author of the Boudica trilogy
 
"Covering the twenty years that turned Catherine the Great from a young bride on approval to the legendary Empress of Russia, Eva Stachniak's novel gives a magical insight into the hopes and fears that haunted the corridors of the St. Petersburg palace.  It brings alive the very tastes and textures of the mid-eighteenth century."
-Sarah Gristwood, author of The Girl in the Mirror
 
"Awash in period details and as gripping and suspenseful as any thriller, The Winter Palace gives us a unique look at the making of a queen.  Eva Stachniak allows us to peep through keyholes and overhear whispers as we navigate the intrigues of Imperialist  Russia along with Sophie, the princess who became Catherine the Great.  I loved this book, and this glimpse into a world of silk and shadows, grandeur and gossip."
-Melanie Benjamin, author of The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb
 
"Eva Stachniak has given readers a thrilling glimpse into the scandals and secrets at the heart of the Russian Imperial court. With deft prose and exquisite detail, Stachniak has resurrected one of the most compelling ages in history.  Turn off the phones and lock the doors-you will not put it down."
-Deanna Raybourn, New York Times bestselling author of Silent in the Grave
 
"Utterly enchanting from the first page. Eva Stachniak brings to life the sensual feast that was Catherine the Great''s Russia in this beautifully written, tightly plotted novel."
-Tasha Alexander, author of And Only to Deceive
 
"This is a majestic and splendidly written tale of pride, passion, intrigue and deceit that is brought alive from the first page to the last." 
-Rosalind Laker, author of The Golden Tulip
 
"The Winter Palace is an intensely written, intensely felt saga of the early years that shaped the 18th century''s famous czarina, Catherine the Great. Her survival in the treachery of the Russian court was an amazing feat, and Eva Stachniak captures the fluidity and steeliness that propelled Catherine from a lowly German duchess to one of the towering figures of the century."
-Karleen Koen, New York Times bestselling author of Through a Glass Darkly
 

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