"Excellent." --
Forbes"Vivid and harrowing." -
Air Mail"Entertaining and, at times, heart-wrenching...Rappaport, a prolific historian and highly regarded Romanov expert, unveils a Paris in which Russians had long played a prominent role." -
Wall Street Journal
"Traces the Russian encounter with Paris from the city's glittering years as an expat playground before World War I to the grimmer reality of life in exile after the Bolshevik seizure of power." -
New York Times Book Review "An engaging group biography...Rappaport is a mistress of the telling detail."
--Washington Post"Full of colorful anecdotes and sharp character sketches, this breezy account of life in exile entertains." -
Publishers Weekly "Thorough and extremely well-researched." -
Booklist
"Throughout, [Helen Rappaport], a consummate historian, displays her deep research into the era, the city, and its denizens. A culturally vibrant account of Russians uprooted to Paris during a tumultuous time." -
Kirkus Reviews
"Rappaport's engaging prose and prodigious research makes After the Romanovs a touching and enlightening experience." -
Shelf Awareness
"The depth of the research is impressive, and the scope of the book is ambitious. Rappaport successfully traces those first Belle Époque artists and royals, those who were forced to flee with nothing during the revolution, and their experiences through World War I and beyond."--
Bookreporter.com "One of the effects of the Romanov dynasty's fall in 1917 was a flood of Russian refugees into Europe, including the arrival of aristocrats, artists, writers, and intellectuals who landed in Paris at the height of the city's creative ferment. Helen Rappaport tells their stories with marvelous skill and empathy." -
Christian Science Monitor