Sergei Mironenko
Author of A Lifelong Passion
About the Author
Works by Sergei Mironenko
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Mironenko, Sergei
- Legal name
- Mironenko, Sergei Vladimirovich
- Other names
- Mironenko, Sergei
- Birthdate
- 1951-03-04
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Moscow State University (history) (1973)
Moscow State University (Kandidat) (1978)
Moscow State University (Ph.D.) (1992) - Occupations
- director, Russian State Archive
historian - Organizations
- Insititute of the History of the USSR, Moscow
The State Archive of the Russian Federation
Heraldic Council under the President of the Russian Federation - Awards and honors
- Order of Honour (2010)
Ordre national du Mérite (2015) - Nationality
- USSR (birth)
Russia - Birthplace
- Moscow, Russia, USSR
- Places of residence
- Moscow, Russia
- Map Location
- Russia
Members
Reviews
Take this book's title seriously: it really is only the story of Nicholas and Alexandra, told through their letters and diaries, as well as those of their friends and family, with various supporting contextual documents. Each letter or diary entry is silently edited so you never know if you're reading the entire thing or a small piece, except in extreme instances when the authors include no more than a sentence or two per diary entry/letter. The editing makes for a concentrated, dramatic, show more tragic story: so in love, so destined to be apart, at last happy together, so many daughters, finally an heir . . . then, well. It reads quite novelistically. But tragic stories and novels are constructed; history is messy, with multiple, intersecting plots and characters and real-life ambiguities. This story is too streamlined for any of that reality to come through (the editors charmingly discuss this in their introduction). Though we're certainly aware of the outside world, it's vague and at a remove (perhaps as Nicky and Alix perceived it?) and so the book feels dream-like rather than historical. If this were a novel, I'd give it a 5. If a history, let's say a 3. So as a hybrid I'd give it a 4. Then I remember it had me reading 200 pages until 2:00 am and I knock it up a half star. show less
There is something fascinating about Tsar Nicholas and his family that rises from knowing how tragically they died. This collection definitely helps you to see the events that unfolded through their eyes and puts them into perspective as human beings and individuals caught up in the situation of their births and destinies.
History through letters; an amazing story. Totally absorbing and heart-breaking.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 400
- Popularity
- #60,684
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 15
- Languages
- 2










