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Rating: Summary: what i think Review: Alix's diary is a most important document, it reveals her , but in a very different way to say how her letters do.in her diary, it is of chief importance to note the things she leaves out, and how laconic the text itself is.this tells as much about her at the time than had she written pages about her feelings and experiences. This is an extremely important book, the last page is agonising - the "ex-Tsarina" has written in a fine and clear hand "July 17th" - but the page is blank. We have to read what Alexandra didnt write - between the lines.her last diary reveals her final states of mind, her humaness, her fear, in those last terrible words, in the entry for July 16th. Alix has written her own memorial here, and it is a just tribute.
Rating: Summary: Fascinating but only for the true fanatic Review: As many reviewers have said, the very monotony of Aleksandra's last diary gives it an eerie significance. However, beyond that, there is little to recommend it. Entries, spaced one to a page, mostly consist of a single brief paragraph, and the content is boring-- notes on the weather, her health, the health of her children. "Sat for 10. m[inutes] on the balkony [sic]." It is a very short book, and a very quick read. Only for the true Romanov fanatic (of which I am one), I'm afraid. Aleksandra's letters and the letters & diaries of the others who shared her captivity are far more interesting.
Rating: Summary: Final Record Invaluable to Romanov Enthusiasts Review: It is ironic that, being the most private of persons, many of the last Tsarinia's most intimate thoughts are now available in several books, including this recently declassified diary of her final days. However, readers who search out this book are probably sympathetic, and will find her daily entries of interest and sometimes moving. Alexandra wasn't writing a best-selling novel -- simply a daily account of the tedium of their imprisonment, and how she, her family, and attendants passed the time -- but for those interested in Alix, her husband, and children, this book is a valuable link to their final days. The introduction, essay by Jonathan Brent, and other sections are all appropriate accompaniment. It will be interesting to see if excerpts from the children's diaries also are eventually published; several books compiled and edited by Russian archivists already have quoted from some of those diaries. If you are interested in the last tsar and his family, I invite you to contact me at whitcombj@juno.com.
Rating: Summary: what i think Review: Tsaritsa Alexandra had no idea, of course, that this was her last diary or that anyone besides herself would ever read it. Since we know the ultimate fate of this unhappy woman the banality and monotony of the last few months of her life have an unintentional sense of tragedy. How sad, for example, that she took the time to note the birthdays of various royal connections, people she would never see again and who in some cases (such as George V of England) had abandoned her and her family to their fate. A brief but compulsive read
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