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Rasputin the Holy Devil

Rasputin the Holy Devil

List Price: $34.95
Your Price: $23.07
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: full but out of date treatment of rasputin
Review: It would be hard to give a full and satisfactory account of the life of Rasputin. His exploits -- from duping the Romanov family into thinking he had magic powers, to holding marathon orgies -- were astonishing in their breadth and weirdness. This book, whose title is taken from an anti-Rasputin pamphlet published near the end of his life, does as good a job as any of explaining who he was and where he came from. It was first published several years ago, so it is somewhat out of date with historical scholarship.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: full but out of date treatment of rasputin
Review: It would be hard to give a full and satisfactory account of the life of Rasputin. His exploits -- from duping the Romanov family into thinking he had magic powers, to holding marathon orgies -- were astonishing in their breadth and weirdness. This book, whose title is taken from an anti-Rasputin pamphlet published near the end of his life, does as good a job as any of explaining who he was and where he came from. It was first published several years ago, so it is somewhat out of date with historical scholarship.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Considered a Debaucher as well as a Divine
Review: This study of the "starets" Rasputin is both cinematic and visceral. The reader is shocked by the pre and post coital scents that linger in his shabby rooms, unwashed linens and unwashed body to which the fanciest women were drawn. He had an animal-like hunger for sex, food and drink. He consumed huge plates of fish and was often drunk and not in the condition to respond to the Imperial call for his company. His notorious debauchery was transformed into a religious event by the respectable ladies who even gave their daughters to the sacramental ecstasy. These women and many men as well gave money as well as their bodies to this Siberian giant, wearing soiled clothes, with hair and beard atrociously unkempt.
There is little doubt that Rasputin had some superior powers, be they demonic as history has suggested or from some other plane, his ability to mesmerize and predict is too universally aclaimed to have been untrue. His reputed miracles of healing with the suffering Tsarevitch are well documented for their medical as well as political implications. And Miller's study, closely lifted from many primary sources, substantiates the claim of influence he had over the foreign and domestic policies of the Tsar. The picture of the anguished Romanov, Nicholas, and his unpopular foreign wife; suggests more that their historical doom was as much a feature of their own misfortunes and personal failures as they were from exploitation from the holy father. It was true however, that the weak Nicholas did listen to the advice of the peasant who was so despised by police and royals alike. However the author points out that Rasputin often gave good advice despite the opinions published in the underground pamphlets that circulated throughout Moscow. Miller published this book in 1929 while there were still many living witnesses to refute the misinformation that was disseminated by the Bolsheviks. He researched diaries, publications and police reports as well. Rasputin spoke in defense of the Jews and impacted decisions to halt pogroms. He was the voice of the peasant to a Tsar who was otherwise deaf by virtue of distance not lack of compassion. And it was Rasputin who denounced Russian involvement in the fatal World War, about which he had projected great suffering upon the land. That foreboding we know became horrifyingly true.
Rasputin was indeed a remarkably craven figure, lustful and drunken, but not, we discover, alone in his sin. He was the subject of several murderous plots and hated most vehemently by a religious power figure, Iliodore, who had been displaced in his position with the royal family. If Rasputin were from fiction, where he seems to belong, there would be some way to decide about the true nature of his soul, but this is life filtered through time and so we will likely continue to remain unsure. I recommend this book as a clear and relatively unsubjective account of the times. It certainly is superior to Massie's Nicholas and Alexandra.


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