Kremlin Wives
The Secret Lives of the Women Behind the Kremlin Walls—From Lenin to Gorbachev
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Beschreibung des Verlags
For over seventy years the Kremlin was the bastion of the all-powerful Soviet rulers. A great deal is known about the men who held millions of fates in their iron grip, yet little is known about the women—the wives and mistresses—who shared their lives. They took part in the Revolution and its aftermath, bore children, and suffered abuse; some were arrested and sent to Siberia, driven to suicide, or even murdered. In 1991 the KGB granted the author access to its secret files, which, together with the author’s own research and interviews, provided the material for this book. Here for the first time the stark and sometimes scandalous truth about these women is revealed.
Lenin’s wife worked passionately for the Revolution alongside her husband, from the time of Lenin’s exile until her death. His mistress was also a close friend of his wife. Stalin married Nadezhda Alliluyeva when she was only sixteen. Earlier, he had had a relationship with Nadezhda’s mother, and there is strong evidence that his wife may also have been his daughter. When she was found dead in a pool of blood, the official verdict was suicide, but many believe she was murdered. Secret Police Chief Lavrenti Beria, known as “The Butcher,” roamed the streets in Moscow in a curtain-drawn limousine, stalking young girls who would later be abducted by his agents. One was forced to marry Beria—his wife Nina Teimurazovna.
Among the many other Kremlin “wives” portrayed here are: Alexandra Kollontai, feminist and supporter of “free love”; Larissa Reisner, Boris Pasternak’s muse; Olga Kameneva, Trotsky’s sister; Nina Khrushchev; Victoria Brezhnev; Galina Brezhneva; Tatyana Fillipovna Andropov, and Raisa Gorbachev—supposedly the only Soviet ruler’s wife to have married for love.
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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Although news stories report that this ``Kitty Kelley-ish'' peekaboo sold 2.5 million copies in Russia, American readers are apt to find Vasilieva's expose of the lives of Kremlin wives (and their husbands) boring. And whatever scandals she includes smack of irresponsible journalism, for Vasilieva, a member of the nomenklatura who had access to official files, supplies no documentation for her most awesome contentions. For example, she speculatively attributes the 1932 suicide of Stalin's wife Nadezhda to her discovery that her husband was her father. There's a great deal about the lasciviousness of Beria, Stalin's hatchetman, none of it new. The majority of the Kremlin women Vasilieva focuses on, in any case, aren't of great moment to American readers. And Tatyana Andropov and Raisa Gorbachev are given so little attention one wonders at Vasilieva's rare restraint. Photos.