This is my first time participating in a Blog Tour, and I am excited to feature Tsarina! While you are here, please take a moment to dive into an excerpt of the book provided by the publisher. You will get hooked. Promise! You can find my original review here.
From the Jacket:
"Makes Game of Thrones look like a
nursery rhyme." —Daisy Goodwin, New York Times bestselling
author of The Fortune Hunter
“[Alpsten] recounts this remarkable woman’s colourful life and times." —Count
Nikolai Tolstoy, historian and author
Before there was Catherine the Great, there was Catherine Alexeyevna: the first
woman to rule Russia in her own right. Ellen Alpsten's rich, sweeping debut
novel is the story of her rise to power.
St. Petersburg, 1725. Peter the Great lies dying in his magnificent Winter
Palace. The weakness and treachery of his only son has driven his father to an
appalling act of cruelty and left the empire without an heir. Russia risks
falling into chaos. Into the void steps the woman who has been by his side for
decades: his second wife, Catherine Alexeyevna, as ambitious, ruthless and
passionate as Peter himself.
Born into devastating poverty, Catherine used her extraordinary beauty and
shrewd intelligence to ingratiate herself with Peter’s powerful generals,
finally seducing the Tsar himself. But even amongst the splendor and opulence
of her new life—the lavish feasts, glittering jewels, and candle-lit hours in
Peter’s bedchamber—she knows the peril of her position. Peter’s attentions are
fickle and his rages powerful; his first wife is condemned to a prison cell,
her lover impaled alive in Red Square. And now Catherine faces the ultimate
test: can she keep the Tsar’s death a secret as she plays a lethal game to
destroy her enemies and take the Crown for herself?
From the sensuous pleasures of a decadent aristocracy, to the incense-filled
rites of the Orthodox Church and the terror of Peter’s torture chambers, the
intoxicating and dangerous world of Imperial Russia is brought to vivid
life. Tsarina is the story of one remarkable woman whose bid
for power would transform the Russian Empire.
Excerpt:
Prologue
In the Winter Palace, 1725
He is dead. My beloved husband, the mighty tsar of all
the Russias, has died—and just in time.
Moments before death
came for him, Peter called for a quill and paper to be brought to him in his
bedchamber in the Winter Palace. My heart almost stalled. He had not forgotten, but was going to
drag me down with him. When he lost consciousness for the last time and the
darkness drew him closer to its heart, the quill slipped from his fingers.
Black ink spattered the soiled sheets; time held its breath. What had the tsar wanted to settle with
that last effort of his tremendous spirit?
I knew the answer.
The candles in the tall candelabra filled the room with a
heavy scent and an unsteady light; their glow made shadows reel in corners and
brought the woven figurines on the Flemish tapestries to life, their coarse
faces showing pain and disbelief. Outside the door,
the voices of the people who’d stood
there all night were drowned out by the February wind rattling furiously at the shutters. Time spread slowly, like oil on water. Peter had pressed
himself into our souls like his signet ring
in hot wax. It seemed impossible
that the world hadn’t careened to a
halt at his passing. My husband, the greatest will ever to
impose itself on Russia, had been more than our ruler. He had been our fate. He was
still mine.
The doctors—Blumentrost, Paulsen, and Horn—stood silently
around Peter’s bed, staring at him, browbeaten. Five kopecks’ worth of medicine, given early enough, could have saved him. Thank
God for the quacks’ lack of good sense.
Without
looking, I could feel Feofan Prokopovich, the archbishop of Novgorod, watching
me, along with Alexander Menshikov. Prokopovich had made the tsar’s will
eternal and Peter had much to thank him for. Menshikov, on the other hand, owed
his fortune and influence to Peter. What was it Peter had said when someone
tried to blacken Alexander Danilovich’s name to him by referring to his murky
business dealings? “Menshikov is always Menshikov, in all that he does!” That
had put an end to that.
Dr. Paulsen had closed the tsar’s eyes and crossed his
hands on his breast, but he hadn’t removed the scroll, Peter’s last will and
testament, from his grasp. Those hands, which were always too dainty for the
tall, powerful body, had grown still, helpless. Just two weeks earlier he had
plunged those very hands into my hair, winding it round his fingers, inhaling
the scent of rosewater and sandalwood.
“My Catherine,” he’d said, calling me by the name he
himself had given me, and he’d smiled
at me. “You’re still a beauty. But
what will you look like in a convent, shorn, and bald? The cold there will
break you, your spirit, even though you’re strong
as a horse. Do you know that Evdokia still writes to me begging for a second fur, poor thing! What a good job you can’t write!”
he’d said, laughing.
It had
been thirty years since Evdokia had been banished to the convent. I’d met her once. Her eyes shone with
madness, her shaven head was covered in boils and scabs from the cold and the
filth, and her only company was a
hunchbacked dwarf to serve her in her cell. Peter had ordered the poor creature
have her tongue cut out, so in response to Evdokia’s
moaning and laments, all she was able to do was burble. He’d been right to believe that seeing
Evdokia would fill me with lifelong dread.
I knelt at Peter’s bedside and the three doctors retreated
to the twilight at the edge of the room, like crows driven
from a field: the birds Peter had been so terrified of in the last years of his life. The tsar had called open season on the hapless birds all over his empire. Farmers caught, killed, plucked, and roasted them for reward. None of this helped Peter:
silently, at night, the bird would
slip through the padded walls and locked doors of his bedchamber. Its ebony wings blotted the light and in their cool shadow, the
blood on the tsar’s hands never dried. His fingers were not yet those of a corpse, but soft, and still warm. For a moment, the fear and anger of these past few months
slipped from my heart
like a thief in the night. I kissed his hands and breathed in his familiar scent
of tobacco, ink, leather, and
the perfume tincture that was blended for
his sole use in Grasse.
I took the scroll from his hand—it was easy
enough to slide it out, although my blood thickened with fear and my veins were
coated with frost and rime like branches in our Baltic winter. It was important
to show everyone that I alone was entitled to do this—I, his wife, and the
mother of his children. Twelve times I had given birth.
The paper rustled as I unrolled it. Not for the first
time, I was ashamed of my inability to read, and I handed his last will to
Feofan Prokopovich. At least Menshikov was as ignorant as I. Ever since the
days when Peter first drew us into his orbit and cast his spell upon us, we had
been like two children squabbling over their father’s love and attention. Batjushka tsar, his people called him.
Our little father tsar.
Prokopovich
must have known what Peter had in mind for me. He was an old fox with
a sharp wit, as comfortable in heavenly and earthly realms. Daria had once
sworn that he had three thousand books in
his library. What, if you
please, can one man do with three thousand books? The scroll sat lightly in his
liver-spotted hands now. After all,
he himself had helped Peter draft the decree that shocked us all. The tsar had
set aside every custom, every law: he wanted to appoint his own successor and
would rather leave his empire to a worthy stranger than his own, unworthy
child.
How timid Alexey had
been when we first met, the spitting image of his mother, Evdokia, with his veiled gaze and high, domed forehead. He couldn’t
sit up straight, because Menshikov had thrashed his back and buttocks
bloody and sore. Only when it was too late did Alexey grasp his fate: in his
quest for a new Russia, the tsar would spare no one, neither himself, nor his
only son. You were no blood of my blood, Alexey, no flesh of my flesh,
and so I was able to sleep soundly. Peter, though, had been haunted by
nightmares from that day on.
My heart
pounded against my lightly laced
bodice—I was surprised it didn’t echo
from the walls—but I met Prokopovich’s gaze
as calmly as I could. I wriggled my toes
in my slippers, as I could not
afford to faint.
Prokopovich’s smile was as thin as one of the wafers he
would offer in church. He knew the secrets of the human heart; especially mine.
“Read, Feofan,” I said quietly.
“Give everything to . . .” He paused, looked
up, and repeated: “To . . .” Menshikov’s
temper flared; he reared as if someone had struck him with a whip, like in the good old days. “To whom?” he snarled at Prokopovich. “Pray tell, Feofan, to whom?”
I could hardly breathe. The fur was suddenly much too hot
against my skin
From Tsarina by
Ellen Alpsten. Copyright © 2020 by the author and reprinted by permission of
St. Martin’s Publishing Group.
About the Author:
ELLEN ALPSTEN was born and raised in the Kenyan highlands.
Upon graduating from L'Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris, she worked as a
news anchor for Bloomberg TV London. Whilst working gruesome night shifts on
breakfast TV, she started to write in earnest, every day, after work and a nap.
Today, Ellen works as an author and as a journalist for international
publications such as Vogue, Standpoint and CN
Traveller. She lives in London with her husband, three sons and a moody fox
red Labrador. Tsarina is her debut novel.