This post first published June 29, 2012.
Author: Carolly Erickson
First Published: September 2008
Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin
352 pages (paperback)
This is the third Erickson book I’ve read now, and I’ve come to a
realization: if you want historical fiction that is also historically
accurate, you probably won’t like Erickson’s works. But if you don’t
mind authors taking some liberties with history, then you’ll probably
enjoy Erickson’s novels. I fall in the latter group — I don’t mind
authors making things up (though I do enjoy historical accuracy as
well). And there are a lot of made up events and characters in The Tsarina’s Daughter.
In this book, the Grand Duchess Tatiana actually survived the
assassination of her family and is living in Saskatchewan, Canada, in
1989. She has decided to tell the story of her family during the Russian
Revolution: how her father the Tsar ran the country, how her mother
dealt with her “delusions” and obsession with that “healer”, Rasputin,
and how she fell in and out of love over the years until she found the
right man for her.
I thought it was really interested how Erickson decided to use
Tatiana, the second eldest daughter of the Tsar and Tsarina, as her main
character, as most novels love romanticizing Anastasia instead. I
actually have never really read anything dealing with last Tsar
and his family that didn’t have Anastasia as the main character, so
this was a different experience indeed. I do not know that much about
Tatiana Romanov, certainly not to the extent that I know Anastasia (I
had an Anastasia phase when I was in middle school; I adored the mystery
surrounding the missing last duchess and wanted to know everything I
could about her), but I’m certain a majority of this novel is made up,
especially her romances.
However, as I said before, I don’t mind historical fiction that
actually puts some real fiction in it, and I thought the story was quite
well done. It was interesting, it had my attention and once I started
reading, I was wrapped in the story. I actually quite enjoyed the
made-up romances of Tatiana. She was a teenager at the time, after all,
so I thought it plausible that she had a crush or two. However, other
than the romances, I found Tatiana to be a bit of a passive character. I
felt like the story was really about the Russian Revolution, just seen
through Tatiana’s eyes. Even though Tatiana was the main character
though, I thought the most interesting characters were her parents, Tsar
Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra, who were portrayed as major players
in the Revolution. We see, through Tatiana’s eyes, how her parents
contributed to the decline of their family, the general lack of
confidence the Russian people felt towards the monarchy, and the Russian
Revolution. I would love to read a novel about those two rulers,
actually! (Unfortunately, the historical royalty fiction market is still
quite saturated with Tudor novels, so I might be in for a long wait).
Since the author had already chosen to go down the historically
fiction route (as opposed to historically accurate), I would have loved
if there was a short chapter on how Tatiana’s life had been after she
moved to Canada. It would have been a nice way to wrap up the story, as
opposed to what I feel was a rather blunt ending, that basically said ‘I
managed to escape and move to Canada, the end’ (an exaggeration, but
you know what I mean). Regardless, I enjoyed this book a lot and would
recommend it to people who don’t mind large doses of fiction in their
historical novels.
My Rating: 3.5/5
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