Amor Towles

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On the sixth, Harrison Salisbury, the new Moscow bureau chief of The New York Times, stood in the Count’s old rooms (now occupied by the Mexican chargé d’affaires), to watch as members of the Presidium arrived in a cavalcade of ZIM limousines and as Soso’s coffin, taken from a bright blue ambulance, was borne ceremoniously inside.
Amor Towles
Harrison Salisbury When I was a boy of ten, I threw a bottle with a note into the Atlantic Ocean near summer’s end. When we got home a few weeks later there was a letter waiting for me on New York Times stationery. It turned out that my bottle had been found by Harrison Salisbury, a managing editor of the Times and the creator of its Op-Ed page. He and I ended up corresponding for many years, and I eventually met him on my first visit to New York when I was seventeen. It so happens that Salisbury was the Moscow bureau chief for the Times from 1949 to 1954. A few colorful details in A Gentleman in Moscow spring from his memoirs; but he also makes a cameo at this point in the novel, and it is his fedora and trench coat that the Count steals to mask his escape.
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Leroy Sponic
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Leroy Sponic
Ms. Galvin more like hottest
Donna
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Donna
What a terrific man, to respond to a boy’s note in a bottle! ❤️
Adlai
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Adlai
@Pamela it's entirely credible, if you stretch your skepticism to allow the writer of fiction to omit delivery of the bottle to the esteemed editor by someone who does not have time to correspond with…
A Gentleman in Moscow
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