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The Mirrored World: A Novel [Paperback]

Debra Dean

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Book Description

Aug 20 2012

The bestselling author of "The Madonnas of Leningrad" returns with a breathtaking novel of love, madness, and devotion set against the extravagant royal court of eighteenth-century St. Petersburg.

Born to a Russian family of lower nobility, Xenia, an eccentric dreamer who cares little for social conventions, falls in love with Andrei, a charismatic soldier and singer in the Empress's Imperial choir. Though husband and wife adore each other, their happiness is overshadowed by the absurd demands of life at the royal court and by Xenia's growing obsession with having a child--a desperate need that is at last fulfilled with the birth of her daughter. But then a tragic vision comes true, and a shattered Xenia descends into grief, undergoing a profound transformation that alters the course of her life. Turning away from family and friends, she begins giving all her money and possessions to the poor. Then, one day, she mysteriously vanishes.

Years later, dressed in the tatters of her husband's military uniform and answering only to his name, Xenia is discovered tending the paupers of St. Petersburg's slums. Revered as a soothsayer and a blessed healer to the downtrodden, she is feared by the royal court and its new Empress, Catherine, who perceives her deeds as a rebuke to their lavish excesses. In this evocative and elegantly written tale, Dean reimagines the intriguing life of Xenia of St. Petersburg, a patron saint of her city and one of Russia's most mysterious and beloved holy figures. This is an exploration of the blessings of loyal friendship, the limits of reason, and the true costs of loving deeply.


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Harper (Aug 20 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0062218557
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062218551
  • Product Dimensions: 22.6 x 15.2 x 2 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 281 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #252,551 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"Dean's novel grows more profound and affecting with every page."--Booklist

From the Back Cover

A breathtaking novel of love, madness, and devotion set against the extravagant royal court of eighteenth-century St. Petersburg, Russia.

Xenia is an eccentric dreamer when she falls in love with a charismatic singer in the Imperial choir. Though they adore each other, their happiness is overshadowed by the demands of the royal court, and by Xenia's obsession to have a child. When a tragic vision comes true, she withdraws into grief and undergoes a profound transformation, giving her possessions to the poor. Then, one day, she vanishes.

Years later, dressed in the tatters of her husband's mil-itary uniform, Xenia is discovered tending the paupers of St. Petersburg's slums. Revered as a soothsayer and a healer, she is feared by Empress Catherine, who perceives her deeds as a rebuke.

In this elegant tale, Dean reimagines the life of Xenia of St. Petersburg, one of Russia's most mysterious and beloved holy figures. It is an evocative exploration of the blessings of long and loyal friendship, the limits of reason, and the true costs of loving deeply.

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.8 out of 5 stars  65 reviews
20 of 23 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars More than the sum of its parts Aug 13 2012
By E. Smiley - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review
Living up to such a beautiful cover isn't easy, and at the beginning this book felt fairly average. But for me, it came together with a certain beauty that makes me glad to have it on my shelves.

The Mirrored World tells the story of an 18th century Russian religious figure, known as St. Xenia, as seen through the eyes of her cousin, Dasha. It's definitely a secular tale though; using Dasha as the narrator leaves readers the room to decide for ourselves whether Xenia is holy or mad. It's also a very short book (even beyond the brief page count, the font and spacing are generous) and reads more like a novella than a novel: the book is pared down to its bare necessities, with no fluff and every scene meaningful. What it isn't is a fictionalized biography of St. Xenia; we see little of her life after her spiritual transformation. This book is more a work of art than an educational piece of historical fiction, although you'll get some history from it.

So what makes the book come together so well? There are the well-realized characters: in particular Xenia, who seems to feel everything more deeply than most people, and Dasha, whose steadfast love for the cousin she can't quite understand is the bright spot in a melancholy book. There's the beautiful, cold imagery. There's the simple but well-crafted prose. There's the author's expert use of all of this to create and sustain a mood--the same sort of mood that's evoked by that lovely cover.

If I have a criticism, it's that this book took a little while to start working for me, and then it was over so quickly; and I'd have liked to see the character depth that a full-length novel can provide. But when a book leaves you wishing it were longer, you know it's doing something right.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A saint's humble, high, passionate beginning... Sep 19 2012
By Unabridged Chick - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I have a soft spot for saints. Novelists who tackle the life of a saint -- what they might have been really like -- automatically endear themselves to me, and I was drooling with anticipation over this book. Happily, Dean didn't disappoint, and this brisk little novel has the lush extravagance I wanted from a historical novel featuring royalty as well as the more mundane details of everyday life.

Beginning in the 1730s, the story is told by young Dasha, who is mesmerized by her older cousins, Nadya and Xenia. While Nadya is cold and cruel, making a flawless debut into St. Petersburg society, Xenia is dreamy, impulsive, and impractical -- and yet, she makes a successful love match. When tragedy strikes, Xenia's wild exuberance manifests as a discomforting disregard for herself, her property, and her place in society.

I loved this book from the first page -- Dean immediately sucked me in with her sweet narrator, Dasha, and her complicated cousins. Dean juxtaposes the real cruelties of life -- heartbreak, disappointment, loss -- against the historical ones of the era -- like the Empress' cruel mock marriage of her young jester to an old maid that required them to spend their wedding night naked on a bed of ice in a massive ice palace.

What else should I squee about? I raced through this book because I didn't want to leave Dasha, Xenia, and even Nadya, and I was fascinated -- and horrified -- at this look at royalty. (That Empress Anna -- she was a cruel one!) Dean's writing style is effortless, a little pretty, a little detailed, so that mood and place are evoked easily.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Music and poetry combined... Sep 15 2012
By Cynthia K. Robertson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review
The Madonnas of Leningrad by Debra Dean was a fabulous book, so I jumped at the chance to order her latest, The Mirrored World through Amazon Vine. Taking place in St. Petersburg in the 18th Century, The Mirrored World is so beautifully written that it brings to mind music and poetry combined.

The Mirrored World unfolds through the eyes of Daria Nikolayevna Pososhkova, or Dasha. On the fringes of the St. Petersburg Court, Dasha sees her cousin Xenia married to a court musician, Andrei. Dasha comes to live with the young newlyweds, but soon, tragedy overtakes Xenia. She abandons her old way of life, gives away all her possession and disappears. Dasha finally discovers that Xenia is living among the poor of St. Petersburg, where she is considered a seer and a healer. While Dasha coaxes Xenia back home on several occasions, Xenia always makes her way back to the poor where she seems to derive great joy from helping the lowest of the low. Xenia also manages to orchestrate Dasha's life in ways that Dasha could never imagine. The Xenia in The Mirrored World is actually based on the life of Saint Xenia of St. Petersburg, who was often called a fool for Christ, or Holy fool.

There were two things that drew me to The Mirrored World. One was the way Dean draws parallel lives between Dasha and Xenia and the Russian Court. The book begins with Empress Anna on the throne, and ends during the reign of Catherine the Great. Each ruler had their own pleasures, which dictated the behavior of the nobility. "Empress Elizabeth's constant entertainments, once a source of delight, had become a tedious obligation and a formidable expense. By Imperial edict, dresses might be worn at court only just the once, and to enforce this, pages were set at the door to dab ink on the skirts of departing guests." But what I really enjoyed about this book is the beauty of Dean's writing. Music plays an important part of The Mirrored World. Dasha listens to the singing of an Italian castrato, Gaspari, "Though I could not translate the words, there was no need, for the sound went straight to my soul, transcending the poor and broken language we mortals must use. I slipped gratefully out of my body and floated on the current of music, feeling that all of us round the table were a single spirit, a single being. I was filled with love. The voice soared, wave upon wave, until the last note, quivering with tenderness, put us ashore again too soon."

If you want a book that contains Russian history, haunting characters and beautiful writing, The Mirrored World is for you.

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