Reviews
New York Times journalist Brooks adds flesh to the framework of academic Soviet history with this true tale of love and passion in early Soviet Russia. During the Russian Revolution, Marc Cheftel, head of the Russian health department, helped the American Friends Famine Relief committee do their work. The Quakers in turn helped him get a visa to come to New York. Once there, Cheftel, who was also an undercover operative for the CPU (forerunner of the KGB), met and fell in love with Bluet Robinoff, the petite French wife of Russian expatriate Max Robinoff. He convinced Bluet to divorce Max and move to Moscow - just in time for collectivization. Marc lived to see his dream of peasant communism deteriorate into the Soviet catastrophe of the 1930s. He died in the feeding frenzy of Stalin's purges, shortly after Bluet's return to America. This book si excellent for both Soviet history experts and novices, as it accurately portrays Soviet history in avery understandable terms. Igal Halfin's Terror in My Soul and Bertrand Patenaude's The Big Show in Bololand are good for more information on 1920s Soviet history. Highly recommended for public libraries. - Harry Willems, Southeast Kansas Lib. Syst., Iola ( Library Journal , June 15, 2004) Tragic love affairs that destroy a powerful man's career and a woman's life will always exert a grip on our imaginations and sense of historical inevitability (think, for example, of Charles Stewart Parnell and Mrs. O'Shea). The relationship revealed in Brooks's well-researched chronicle, while not as momentous or famous as some, provides a fascinating record of an audacious love affair as well as a significant insight into the early years of Stalin's reign in Russia. In the 1920s, charming Bluet Rabinoff presided over the celebrity-filled salon convened by her husband, famed New York impresario Max Rabinoff. When she fell in love with dashing Marc Cheftel, a physician sent to the U.S. ostensibly on behalf of the Russian Red Cross, she had no idea that he was in fact a master spy, high up in the GPU. Brilliant and ambitious, Cheftel was also an idealist who thought the Bolshevik revolution would banish poverty and anti-Semitism in his country. When he convinced Bluet to divorce her husband, leave her teenage daughter and return to Russia with him, he felt sure that he'd soon be sent to a glamorous post in Europe. Instead, both he and Bluet became hostages to history. Stalin's ruthless ascendancy and his purges of the original Bolshevik conspirators gain a vivid immediacy in Brooks's descriptions of daily life in Moscow during the accelerating reign of terror and the events that sealed Marc's doom. The author's access to documents, letters, survivors of the era and to Bluet Rabinoff herself before she died in 1976 contribute to a gripping narrative. Some may quibble because journalist and nonfiction writer Brooks ( The Woman Who Defied Kings ) has reconstructed conversations, but there is ample documentation here of a personal tragedy within the larger vortex of cataclysmic betrayal and misery. Agent, Carolyn French. (June) ( Publishers Weekly , April 19, 2004), "...the book is excellent for both Soviet history experts and novices as it accurately portrays Soviet history in very understandable terms." ( Library Journal , June 15, 2004) "Stalin's ruthless ascendancy... gain[s] a vivid immediacy in Brook's descriptions of daily life in Moscow... a gripping narrative." ( Publishers Weekly , April 19, 2004)