Product Description
The Russian Countess: Escaping Revolutionary Russia. Edith Sollohub. Countess Edith Sollohub, born Edith Natalie de Martens, was the daughter of a high-ranking Russian diplomat, and the mother of three young sons, destined to join the social and intellectual elite of Imperial Russia. She was born in 1886 into a wealthy St Petersburg family. The Revolution of 1917 changed the course of all their lives. The first quarter of her memoir details her childhood and early married life: winters in St Petersburg, summers on country estates. In January 1918, the family estate is nationalised. That summer, starvation a prospect, Edith takes her three sons to Estonia. She returns to St Petersburg (by now Petrograd) alone, only to be trapped by the closure of the frontier after the November armistice. The following two years are driven by her determination to be reunited with her boys. She earns money by pulling heavy loads on sledges. Devoted servants bring food from her confiscated estate. In January 1920 she arrives in Moscow with forged papers intending to reach Poland with refugees. After weeks of imprisonment she journeys westward, first as a violinist in a troupe of artistes, later as a Red Army nurse. She arrives in Poland that October by hiding in a woodshed as her unit retreats and the Poles advance. With photos and maps, her story is breathtaking, authentic, and spiritual. (Review by Janet Hancock - thank you!)
UK: Impress, 2011. Second edition with amendments. Paperback, 404 pages. Illustrated. About fine. 1 copy only.