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Parallel Lives: A Love Story from a Lost Continent [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 198x129x24 mm, kaal: 260 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: William Collins
  • ISBN-10: 0008629005
  • ISBN-13: 9780008629007
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  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 198x129x24 mm, kaal: 260 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: William Collins
  • ISBN-10: 0008629005
  • ISBN-13: 9780008629007
This is the simplest tale in the world. Two people meet and fall in love. But the route which brought Larissa Salmina and Francis Haskell to a backstreet Venetian restaurant in 1962 was anything but straightforward.





Larissa was born in northern Russia, the daughter of a Soviet army officer from a noble family who survived the siege of Leningrad by eating cats tails and being evacuated over the ice. Francis was the grandson of an Iraqi Jew, forever feeling out of place in his adopted country of England. How they could meet and instantly understand each other so profoundly that both were prepared to risk heartbreak, and in her case, retribution, to be together is the story of this book.



Escaping Leningrad, teenage Larissa lived in the Urals surrounded by Spanish revolutionaries, went feral and after the war rose to become the youngest Commissar in the Soviet Union and Keeper of Italian Drawings at the Hermitage. She took the Russian contribution to the Venice Biennale in 1962 and lost it on the journey. She briefly absconded with her supervisors corpse, developed a useful sideline in forgery, and stole (I didnt steal it. I liberated it) a Matisse from the Italian government. She was a trained connoisseur and could spot a Tiepolo at 100 yards.



Francis was a distinguished art historian, comfortably at home in Kings College Cambridge. But he was lonely, self-doubting and had all but abandoned hope of falling in love, or finding anyone who could love him. Larissa swept away all the years of anguish in one meal. Bestselling novelist and art historian Iain Pears fabulous book brings into sharp focus the strange world of the Soviet Union, and the even stranger world of a certain variety of the English elite. It seeks to show how leaving the Soviet Union was a sacrifice for her and how it was the English man, not the Russian woman, who was set free because of their meeting.



Iain Pears knew both his principal characters well. His book is a story of Europe; not the Europe of geographical and ideological divisions but of a certain mentality which was common to a few on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Whatever their differences in nationality, language, and politics, both Larissa and Francis were members of a unified, pan-European culture which paid little heed to the divisions which so pre-occupied most people of the age. It also operated by very different rules and values to the societies in which they existed. It was a world of dancers, exiles, and the occasional spy, of artists, aristocrats, and academics. It consisted of people who only felt safe when they were away from home, were comfortable only in the company of foreigners. It is a tale of a world we seem to have lost.

Arvustused

'A fascinating jigsaw puzzle of the lost continent of memory'







Financial Times







'This book contains multitudes. You dont have to be an aesthete to love it. To read it is simply to enjoy good company, to revel in sublime writing and to be gently prodded into thoughts on the meaning of freedom and the transformative experience of love. It is a gorgeous book, a tender tribute to two originals and time well spent'







The Times







'Larissa leaps off the page, a born survivor with a terrific store of anecdotes: the cousin who was eaten by a bear, or the Matisse painting she stole from the Italian government and repatriated to Russiaa warmly sympathetic book. On finishing, youll feel a glow that, against all the odds, this unlikely couple got their happy ever after'







Daily Mail







'A dramatic love story between two bespectacled art historians sounds implausible. But add in the Montague-Capulet effect of the Iron Curtain, along with a fearless Russian heroine who proved that love can conquer every barrier, and you have an enchanting tale: a completely true one, beautifully written by the art historian and novelist Iain PearsPearss account provides a rollercoaster ride of hopes and fears, of secret trysts in non-aligned Yugoslavia, smuggled letters written in code, the Cuban missile crisis apparently ending all hopes of marriage, and then the threat of the hardline Leonid Brezhnev replacing Khrushchev. Yet a mixture of luck and Larissas inspired string-pulling within the Soviet system achieved success against the odds. The couples story is a wonderful tribute to the power of love overcoming a soulless ideology'







Spectator











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Praise for An Instance of the Fingerpost





'One of the very best historical novels ever written' Tom Holland



'The kind of book that has you reading it by torchlight under the bedclothes' The Times

Muu info

A Love Story from a Lost Continent, From the Bestselling Author of An Instance of the Fingerpost
Iain Pears is the author of the bestsellers An Instance of the Fingerpost, The Dream of Scipio, Stones Fall, and Arcadia, and a novella, The Portrait, as well as a series of acclaimed detective novels, a book of art history, and countless articles on artistic, financial and historical subjects. He lives in Oxford, England.