Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman

Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman

3.97 of 5 stars 3.97  ·  rating details  ·  19,894 ratings  ·  1,856 reviews
“[A] tale of power, perseverance and passion . . . a great story in the hands of a master storyteller.”—The Wall Street Journal

The Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Peter the Great, Nicholas and Alexandra, and The Romanovs returns with another masterpiece of narrative biography, the extraordinary story of an obscure German princess who became one of the most remarkable, po...more
Paperback, 672 pages
Published September 18th 2012 by Random House Trade Paperbacks (first published November 8th 2011)
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Sandy Tjan
FROM THE MEMOIRS OF CATHERINE THE GREAT


First things first: that wasn’t my real name. The Empress Elizabeth, who was Peter the Great’s daughter (now, that is a man who truly deserves “the Great” after his name!), changed my name to Ekaterina when she converted me into the Russian Orthodox religion. As for that superfluous title that follows my new name, it was prematurely bestowed on me by the Legislative Commission that I convened to give Russia a more enlightened legal code (more on this later)...more
Renae M.
What I Liked: I have not read many biographies, so I don’t know if this is the norm or not, but I was very impressed with the way Massie goes beyond just chronicling Catherine’s actions. Yes, he reports her decisions and movements, but he provides insight into the why. Based on thorough and credible research, Massie offers his readers a reason for what this great woman did, gives a glimpse into her state of mind. It was an effective tactic that really solidified the credibility of this book and...more
Chrissie
I am impressed. Catherine the Great lived from 1729-1796. She was 14 when she first came to Russia, This book covers this entire time period meticulously. I understand how her childhood experiences came to shape her as an adult. I understand her need for love and why she came to have twelve lovers. At the same time she was motivated to seek power. She played a huge role in European history. All of this history is detailed in the book. You meet her as a person and as a leader. Everything one coul...more
Rebecca Huston
This one was clearly a win for me as a biography of Catherine the Great. Massie's writing is clear, brisk and kept the story moving throughout. What I really enjoyed was how he took the time and trouble to show how Catherine carried forward the reforms begun by Peter the Great, and was a monarch who overcame a great deal of adversity to overcome the obstacles of not being Russian, being a woman, and a usurper to boot -- most biographies focus on her time before becoming empress and/or her lovers...more
Lewis Weinstein
Next up for our book club ... can I read this in 3 weeks?

The first half of this book was mostly boring for me. It is well written, and easy to read, but I really don't care what Sophie/Catherine's gowns looked like. The interesting material about her childhood and move to Russia takes up a small percentage of the pages.

The events relating to Catherine's coup are exciting and well described. Now she is Empress and I have higher hopes for the next 250 pages.

***

The book has definitely become more...more
Cheryl
The Romanov dynasty of Russia spanned three hundred years ending with the abdication and murder of Tsar Nicholas, his wife Alexandra and their five children in 1918. This dramatic turning point in governing was chronicled by Robert K. Massie to critic's applause in "Nicholas and Alexandra". The Pulitzer Prize was awarded the octogenarian author for his narrative biography of Peter the Great.

Continuing his half century Russian history focus, Massie offers the extraordinary life of a fourteen yea...more
Sara
ARC received through the First Reads program.

Like many people, the most I knew about Catherine the Great was that she was a Russian queen with some persistent saucy rumors attached to her. This narrative history sheds a lot of light on the life of the German princess who became Empress of Russia in her own right. For example, the Russian royals didn't necessarily come to the throne by right of primogeniture, which is how Catherine was able to become Empress.

Catherine's marriage to Peter III was...more
Susanna
Won on GoodReads. (Thanks, Random House!)

My mother's currently reading it and enjoying it very much, she tells me.
Laura
Massie's research into the life of Catherine II is extensive (for example, he used three different translations of her Memoirs) and wide-ranging and the writing style is engaging enough to almost make one forget this is a nearly 600 page book (it's the weight that gives it away).

While I knew something about her life, there was much I hadn't and was fascinated to learn. I knew she was a German princess, but not that it was of some small, unimportant state. I knew she and her mother didn't get alo...more
Amelia
As biographies go this one is pretty interesting (if a little hard to follow through all the genealogies in the beginning) and I might go back and finish it someday as an audiobook if ever I am stuck for something to listen to. I just got a little fed up when I reached the part of Catherine's life where her husband Peter II takes power. I know he has been ridiculed by many historians as a poor leader with a tactless and uncouth personality, but I couldn't escape the feeling throughout the first...more
Jennifer (JC-S)
‘She sat on the throne of Peter the Great and ruled an empire, the largest on earth.’

Sophia Augusta Fredericka of Anhalt-Zerbst was born into a minor German noble family on 21 April 1729. Sophia was brought to Russia as a teenager, converted to Orthodoxy, renamed Catherine, and married off by the Empress Elizabeth Petrovna to her nephew and heir Peter. As Catherine II, she was Empress of Russia from 28 June 1762 until her death on 6 November 1796. She came to power following a coup d'état and th...more
Jeff
"Catherine the Great" Robert K. Massie, 2011. I was thrilled when I learned that at the age of 83, Robert K. Massie was actively writing. His published works on Russian history are extraordinary. I would have probably been more partial to a biography of Ivan the Terrible, but Catherine the Great is no less interesting. What other woman in history is rumored to have been fatally injured while frolicking with a stallion? I am sure this book will rocket up the New York Times best seller list.

Judy
Who wouldn't be fascinated by the story of a German princess from a minor German state who was taken to Russia at the age of 14 to marry the heir to the Russian throne--who, by the way, was also German(on his father's side and he was born in a small German state), Lutheran, and a great admirer of Frederick the Great--and ended up becoming one of the greatest rulers in Russian history? In this biography of Catherine the Great, Robert Massie is successful in portraying Catherine as a woman who too...more
Allizabeth Collins
Description:[return][return] Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman by Robert K. Massie is the biography of Sophia Augusta, later known as Russian Empress Catherine the Great. It details Sophia's childhood, marriage, children, affairs, rise to power, famed coup, and eventual death. It is based on recorded historical documents and on Catherine's memoirs.[return][return]Review:[return][return] I have never read any other books by Robert K. Massie, but now I'm hooked. Catherine the Great: Portrai...more
Kimberly
I've been a fan of Robert Massie for a long time, having read all his books on Russian history. This book revolves around the remarkable life of Catherine the Great, a German princess who traveled to Russia at the age of fourteen and became one of the greatest leaders in history.



Born into a minor noble family, Catherine became empress by sheer determination. Once on the throne, she attempts to follow the ideals of Enlightenment philosophers such as Montesquieu and Voltaire. She soon discovers, h...more
Athens
Maybe this book is very excellent at what it wanted to be, but I wanted it to be something different. I wanted a history book.

1) In trying to be accessible, the prose comes off as simplistic at times.

2) A quibble is the repetition of statements from only a few chapters prior. Those statements do help set the scene for the current action, but are sometimes overdone and unnecessary if the reader had been paying any attention at all to what was just recently covered.

3) At one point in the book tow...more
Tatiana
Like probably every woman of note in history, open about and unashamed of her sexuality, Catherine the Great is primarily remembered as a power- and man-hungry, salacious, perverted woman. Try googling her name and see how high on the list of the results is the ever-pressing question - Did she really sleep with a horse? Does anyone care about her accomplishments in politics, art and science? Not really. But her sexual exploits? Oh, YES!

That's why I appreciate Robert K. Massie's Catherine the Gre...more
Margie
I've loved reading Robert K. Massie's Nicholas and Alexandra, and have read it multiple times. So I was looking forward to reading this, yet a bit worried that it wouldn't live up to my expectations. I needn't have worried.

One of Massie's strengths is his ability to bring his readers close enough to his subjects that we are able to get a great sense of their personalities and their humanity. With Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman, he does this in spades. It helps that Catherine was very f...more
Donna
Massie's much anticipated biography of the only female Russian ruler accorded the title "the Great" is as compelling as his previous biographies.

This biography of Sophia Augusta, later known as Catherine, is a deeply researched and masterfully told story.

The book begins with an explaination of Sophia's early childhood. She was not a much loved child, being born a female and not the son her mother wanted. "Johanna could not find or express any maternal feeling. She did not nurse or caress her lit...more
Hadrian
Massie has consistently produced interesting narrative history for some forty years; from naval warfare in Dreadnought and Castles of Steel (my personal favorites) to Nicholas and Alexandra.

This book describes the two periods in Catherine the Great's life. The first, before she took power, was a series of court struggles and petty intrigue. The second was personal struggle on a grand scale, attempting to modernize Russia and live under the ideal of the enlightened despot, like Maria Theresa or F...more
Mamatha Gavini
4 1/2 stars. Biographies. They sometimes fill me with a sense of dread. How much teduious and pendantic writing will I have to suffer through? In this case, none!!! Not only was it a fascinating portrait of a woman who excercised power few women ever have and her extraordinary rise to the throne but also of the Russia and the Europe of her time. And although she believed that absolute monarchy was the best form of government she also was engaged with the Enlightenment and I was surprised by her...more
Catherine Woodman
Ok, I admit that I know essentially nothing about Russian history, and less about the czars and how they came to power. What I knew about the empress Catherine was even more suspect, and fell into the category of titillating rather than historical--multiple lovers, died having sex with a horse.
Well, if Robert Massey is to be believed, this is not the case. She did have a series of lovers throughout her adult life, but fewer than most college students rack up these days, and she appears to have...more
Leon

“[A] tale of power, perseverance and passion . . . a great story in the hands of a master storyteller.”—*The Wall Street Journal

The Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Peter the Great, Nicholas and Alexandra, and The Romanovs returns with another masterpiece of narrative biography, the extraordinary story of an obscure German princess who became one of the most remarkable, powerful, and captivating women in history. Born into a minor noble family, Catherine transformed herself into empress of Rus

...more
Cindy06232001
This book was amazing. I had such a bad opinion about the empress and was always curious about Catherine, the Great. I have a lot more respect for this woman and the life she lead. This is a must read. It starts out a bit slow, but once Catherine comes to Russia, you can't put the book down. This is a huge book and I read this in one week, it was that good, while working full time. I can't wait to read the rest of Mr. Massie's books. Mr. Massie, if you read this review, you are an exceptional wr...more
Carol
I wish Robert Massie had written this book before my trip to Russia in 2008. One thing I was looking forward to seeing on that trip was Catherine’s Palace and The Amber Room. Of course, I also visited The Hermitage and between these settings, I did get to see some the incredible art collection that Catherine amassed during her reign. Ah, but there is so much more to this woman.

Robert K. Massie certainly delivers on the subtitle of his book: The Portrait of a Woman particularly in the opening ch...more
Nancy Petralia
For a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, I found this book disappointing. Massie has indeed done an incredible job of research, but as a storyteller, he's missed the mark. To begin with he starts in the wrong place. The opening sentence is a bore and the following paragraphs, all about Catherine's father, do nothing to entice the reader. A few pages later there's a terrific paragraph that begins:

"Traveling toward an unknown country, propelled by an empress's sentimentality, a mother's ambition and t...more
Mary Lou
Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman by Robert K. Massie is a fascinating book about an amazing woman. Massie uses 574 pages to tell the story, and I think many pages could be omitted, but they are about others, not his subject.

Massie shows clearly how Catherine’s need for love and companionship, her thirst for knowledge, and her ambition and self-discipline developed in her childhood and affected her life. Like Cleopatra, Catherine was ahead of her time. Unlike the Queen of the Nile, Cather...more
Cameling
The evolution of a young German princess into a powerful and rich ruler of Russia makes for fascinating reading. This narrative biography shows the very human side of Catherine the Great, how she arrived in Russia as a 14 year old Sophia of Anhalt as a bride for Crown Prince Peter, and upon conversion to the Russian Orthodox church, became Catherine.

Intelligent as she was beautiful, Catherine read and educated herself. She also learned very quickly how to stay on the good side of her mother-in-l...more
AdultNonFiction Teton County Library
Teton County Library Call Number: BIO CATHERINE MASSIE R

Jeannine's rating: 4 stars
If Catherine the Great, Portrait of a Woman, by Robert Massie were fiction, it would be dismissed as implausible. She was an impoverished teenage German princess chosen by Elizabeth, Empress of Russia, to become the wife of Peter II, an unstable young man whose delight was playing with toy soldiers. After years of an unconsummated marriage, Catherine took the first of 12 lovers and produced an heir for the throne....more
Jennifer Uhlich
6 things:

1. GIRL. What a story. What a life.

2. It's taken me a while to get through it because of real-world-stuff, but it's a credit to Massie's writing that all it took was a few paragraphs and you were back in his brisk, energetic tale. This is how I like my history: a well-told narrative, yet without pretending to know everything about the subject. There are points where the narrative lets us know that the record is missing or incomplete.

3. Behind every benevolent autocrat is, apparently, an...more
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Robert Kinloch Massie (born 1929) is an American historian, writer, winner of a Pulitzer Prize, and a Rhodes Scholar.

Born in Lexington, Kentucky in 1929, Massie spent much of his youth in Nashville, Tennessee and currently resides in Westchester County, New York in the village of Irvington. He studied American history at Yale University and modern European history at Oxford University on his Rhode...more
More about Robert K. Massie...
Nicholas and Alexandra Peter the Great Dreadnought The Romanovs: The Final Chapter Castles of Steel

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“To prove to [her friend, Swedish diplomat Count] Gyllenborg that she was not superficial, Catherine composed an essay about herself, "so that he would see whether I knew myself or not." The next day, she wrote and handed to Gyllenborg an essay titled 'Portrait of a Fifteen-Year-Old Philosopher.' He was impressed and returned it with a dozen pages of comments, mostly favorable. "I read his remarks again and again, many times [Catherine later recalled in her memoirs]. I impressed them on my consciousness and resolved to follow his advice. In addition, there was something else surprising: one day, while conversing with me, he allowed the following sentence to slip out: 'What a pity that you will marry! I wanted to find out what he meant, but he would not tell me.” 4 people liked it
“The love of power and the power to attract love were not easy to reconcile.” 2 people liked it
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