A stunning family saga that mixes the fur trade, psychoanalysis and Trotsky
Mary-Kay Wilmers is the editor of the London Review of Books, the largest- selling literary publication in Europe. She has written for the Listener, TLS and The New Yorker.
A superbly written book, The Eitingons is much more than a family
history, for the author has a deep knowledge of the cultural and
political context, whether of twentieth-century America or the
Soviet Union, in which they lived. It stands as an intimate
portrait of a world that seems far removed from our own.
*The Observer*
Unlike the hordes of amateur historians who have mobbed the world's
libraries over the past decade on the theory that reconstructing
lineage equates to personal discovery, Wilmers is up to something
that commands general attention.
*New Yorker*
The Eitingons is a riveting history of the twentieth century. It
deals with war, displacement, murder, espionage, the Jewish
diaspora and psychoanalysis. It explains Trotsky's assassination,
the growth of Freud's teachings, the importance of the fur trade,
the uses of money and the lure of the past. There is a lightness
and a truthfulness in the narrative that makes you turn every page
with pure fascination.
*Colm Tóibín*
Wilmers' adventures in digging through [the Eitingons'] lost world
makes Mary-Kay one of the book's most intriguing characters.
*Harper's*
Like characters in some Russian Jewish Stalinist Freudian
capitalist 20th-century fairy tale, the Eitingons are larger than
life, their fates bitter and all too human.
*New York Times*
Wilmers pieces together what she can of the shadowy life of Leonid
Eitingon, a high-level KGB killer ... and looks for clues that her
grandfather's cousin Max, a protégé of Freud in Berlin, and Motty,
a New York fur trader, were also working for Stalin. What emerges
is a fascinating story of family secrets and silences.
*New Statesman*
Well researched, bold, and revealing, Wilmers's book transforms a
series of dark family secrets into an illuminating experience for
anybody brave enough to delve into the enigma of family
history.
*Publishers Weekly*
Compelling... [Wilmers] has produced a deeply-researched family
chronicle, which bears only a trace resemblance to the memoirs that
dominate the book industry.
*Barnes and Noble Review*
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