Study Guide for Book Clubs Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Study Guide for Book Clubs: A Gentleman in Moscow (Study Guides for Book Clubs) Study Guide for Book Clubs: A Gentleman in Moscow by Kathryn Cope
263 ratings, 4.31 average rating, 13 reviews
Open Preview
Study Guide for Book Clubs Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“Harrison Salisbury When Amor Towles was ten years old, he threw a bottle containing a short note he had written into the Atlantic Ocean. A few weeks later he received a letter from the man who found it: Harrison Salisbury, the managing editor of The New York Times. From this childhood incident, a correspondence developed between Salisbury and Towles and they eventually met. In his earlier career, Harrison Salisbury was the real-life chief correspondent for The New York Times in Moscow. The author of an important history of the Russian Revolution, Black Nights, White Snow, his memoirs were the source of some of the detail Towles uses in A Gentleman in Moscow. Salisbury’s cameo appearance in the novel, along with the mention of his fedora and trench coat (stolen by the Count as a disguise) pay tribute to Salisbury’s literary legacy on early twentieth century Russia as well as the author’s serendipitous connection with him.”
Kathryn Cope, Study Guide for Book Clubs: A Gentleman in Moscow
“previous “life of the purposefully unrushed” becomes a race against time.”
Kathryn Cope, Study Guide for Book Clubs: A Gentleman in Moscow
“Like the Count, she realises that good fortune and privilege can be”
Kathryn Cope, Study Guide for Book Clubs: A Gentleman in Moscow