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A Gentleman in Moscow
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A Gentleman In Moscow
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Sara Grace
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May 05, 2017 01:57PM

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For me it was about the possibility of living a life of grace and kindness even if placed under impossible, but fortunate, conditions while living in the midst of a cruel, incomprehensibly inhuman political regime. As Ron Charles, reviewer at the Washington Post wrote, “'A Gentleman in Moscow' offers a chance to sink back into a lost attitude of aristocracy — equal parts urbane and humane — just what we might expect from the author of that 2011 bestseller 'Rules of Civility.' But if Towles’s story is an escape we crave, it is also, ironically, a story of imprisonment. "
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entert...
Ron also wrote:
"The novel’s trickier challenge is the potential for glibness. There could easily have been something unseemly about a light comedy that takes place against the background of two world wars and the fathomless horrors of Stalinism — 'Hogan’s Heroes' with room service. Towles’s solution is wry understatement that extends to a series of historical footnotes. 'Let us concede,' he says at the start of one chapter, 'that the early thirties in Russia were unkind.' It’s an approach that allows him to pursue his warmhearted story while acknowledging, with Russian irony, the ocean of suffering taking place all around it. "


Books mentioned in this topic
Rules of Civility (other topics)The Big Green Tent (other topics)
A Gentleman in Moscow (other topics)
A Gentleman in Moscow (other topics)
A Gentleman in Moscow (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Amor Towles (other topics)Amor Towles (other topics)
Amor Towles (other topics)
Lyudmila Ulitskaya (other topics)