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Daughters of Victory

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the acclaimed author of The Last Checkmate comes a brilliant novel spanning from the Russian Revolution to the Nazi occupation of the Soviet Union and following two unforgettable women...their fates intertwined by ties of family and interrupted by the tragedy of war. Perfect for readers of Kate Quinn, Pam Jenoff, and Elena Gorokhova.

Russia 1917: Beautiful, educated Svetlana Petrova defied her stifling aristocratic family to join a revolution promising freedom. Now, released after years of imprisonment, she discovers her socialist party vying for power against the dictatorial Bolsheviks and her beloved uncle, a champion of her cause, was murdered by a mysterious assassin named Orlova. Her signature? Blinding her victims before she kills them. Svetlana resolves to avenge his death by destroying this vicious opponent, even as she longs to reunite with the daughter she has not seen in years.

USSR 1941: Now living in obscurity in a remote village, Svetlana opens her home to Mila Rozovskaya, the eighteen-year-old granddaughter from Leningrad she has never met. She hopes to protect Mila from the oncoming Nazi invasion, but when the enemy occupies the village, Svetlana sees the young woman fall under the spell of the resistance—echoing her once-passionate idealism. As Mila takes up her fight, dangerous secrets and old enemies soon threaten all Svetlana holds dear. To protect her family, she must confront her long-buried past—yet if the truth emerges victorious, it holds the power to save or shatter them. A risk Svetlana has no choice but to take.

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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2022

      In the New York Times best-selling Benedict's The Mitford Affair, Nancy Mitford must choose between family and country when she realizes to her shock that two of her sisters support the Nazis' rise to power. Billed as an historical thriller (with the accent on historical), the Edgar Award--winning Blauner's Picture in the Sand tells the story of Egyptian American businessman Ali Hassan, who shares his secret activist past with a grandson now in Syria as a holy warrior, hoping to dissuade him from extremist actions (75,000-copy first printing). By the author of the internationally best-selling The German Girl, Correa's The Night Travelers moves from Ally Keller's struggles to get biracial daughter Lilith out of 1930s Berlin to Lilith's experiences during the Cuban revolution to Nadine's work in late 1980s Berlin to honor the remains of victims of the Nazis even as daughter Luna encourages her to investigate her own past. American Book Award--winning, Orange Prize short-listed Divakaruni's Independence tracks the fate of three Indian sisters--ambitious Priya, gorgeous Deepa, and devout Jamina--who are torn apart as the 1947 Partition looms (50,000-copy first printing). Saab's Daughters of Victory, successor to her well-received debut, The Last Checkmate, follows Svetlana Petrova from revolutionary idealism in 1917 Russia to disillusionment with Bolshevism to concern for a granddaughter aching to join the resistance as Germans invade the Soviet Union in 1941 (100,000-copy paperback and 30,000-copy hardcover first printing). A debut from Black Canadian Thomas, In the Upper Country opens in 1800s Dunmore, Canada, terminus of the Underground Railroad, where imbued Black journalist Lensinda Martin urges a new arrival who's just killed a slave hunter to give testimony before her arrest; instead, she proposes that they trade stories, with the resulting narrative a braided-together history of Black and Indigenous peoples in North America.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 14, 2022
      A former aristocrat who embraced the uprising in 1905 Russia shepherds her granddaughter through similar difficult choices during the 1941 Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in the engrossing latest from Saab (after The Last Checkmate). Svetlana Petrova joins her uncle Misha in the Socialist Revolutionary Party, leaving her noble family behind. After 10 years in a czarist prison, she travels to Moscow, where she learns Misha was assassinated during the 1917 revolution and reunites with Kazimir Grigoryevich, her former lover and the father of her daughter, Tatiana, whom she left at a church in Kiev. Though Kazimir suspects Svetlana is a bourgeois infiltrator, she remains determined to aid his anti-Bolshevik efforts with the Socialist Revolutionary Party. Fast forward to 1941 U.S.S.R. where Svetlana, now blind, lives in a remote village in the Vitebsk region. Though Tatiana now despises her, believing Svetlana abandoned her to continue her fight within the Socialist Revolutionary Party, Svetlana agrees to have Tatiana’s daughter, Mila, stay with her as the German army approaches. While seeking to keep Mila out of harm’s way, Svetlana eventually realizes that the survival of her granddaughter may require her to face secrets from her past. Saab brings a magnetic authenticity to the proceedings as her richly drawn characters make life and death decisions. Historical fiction fans will be riveted. Agent: Kaitlyn Johnson, Belcastro Agency.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2022
      In 1917 in Russia, Svetlana, a former aristocrat, is released from a 10-year sentence as a political prisoner and travels to Moscow to reunite with her uncle, the leader of a revolutionary contingent. But she learns that her former lover, Kazimir, has taken over the group after her uncle was killed by a covert assassin. Despite increasing violence from the opposition and a fiery reunion with Kazimir, a resolute Sveltana vows to hunt down her uncle's murderer, no matter the cost. In an alternating narrative set years later, Russia is again a landscape of upheaval as Mila is sent from her home in Leningrad to a farming town to live with her grandmother, the now elderly Svetlana, to escape German armed forces. Mila is quickly drawn to the resistance and infiltrates a garrison of German soldiers. As Mila's work becomes increasingly dangerous, threatening not only her life but those she loves, Svetlana's long-held secrets are shockingly revealed when past and present collide. Meticulously researched, Saab's novel, following her equally captivating The Last Checkmate (2021), blends history, tragedy, and intrigue into her characters' impassioned journeys.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2022

      Saab's 2021 debut novel, The Last Checkmate, featured a teenage heroine whose chess skills help her survive Auschwitz. Drawing again on catastrophic upheavals of history, Saab now portrays young women able to hold their own as fierce fighters and political plotters. The titular daughters are three generations of Russian women whose adventuresome lives span revolution and war, 1917-43. Svetlana rejects her noble roots, joins the Social Revolutionaries to battle the Bolsheviks, and tries to assassinate Lenin. Her daughter, Tatiana, is left in a Ukrainian orphanage but World War II finds her in the siege of Leningrad. The granddaughter, Mila, sent to shelter with Svetlana in Vitebsk, joins the anti-German partisans. Weaponless, she uses forest mushrooms to poison the hated occupiers. Dedication to lofty political goals does not distract the women from passionate attachments to their manly comrades-in-arms. The action between the sheets rivals the action in the streets. Challenged by hateful enemies, Saab's protagonists absorb punishing blows, but their wily resilience lets them live and love another day. VERDICT Reminiscent of Janet Fitch's novels about the Russian Revolution, Saab's book indulgently lingers too long in several plot complications.--Barbara Conaty

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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