Readers may look forward to the projected sequel. Although the plot is fairly formulaic and much of the cast outrageously stereotyped-there are only devoted servants, contented serfs, happy peasants-the entanglements nevertheless intrigue. Anna leaves and marries unwisely, leading a hollow existence as the wife of a wealthy, dissolute nobleman. Cynthia Harrod-Eagles (aka Emma Woodhouse, Elizabeth Bennett) Cynthia Harrod-Eagles was born on 13 August 1948 in Shepherd's Bush, London, England, where was educated at Burlington School, a girls' charity school founded in 1699, and at the University of Edinburgh and University College London, where she studied English, history and philosophy. Against the somber background of the Napoleonic wars and ominous portents that the French emperor has designs on Russia, tensions within the Kirov household increase. Warmly received in the count's diverse Petersburg household-which includes his ineffectual wife, Irina his vitriolic mother, Vera and a host of ebullient relatives-Anne, now called Anna Petrovna, predictably, falls in love with the count, whose response is guarded. Dismissed by her stuffy English employers because of a social blunder, the outspoken Anne is hired by Count Nikolai Kirov, an adviser to the czar, to educate his two lively daughters, Yelena, nine, and Natasha, two. In this vast yet meticulously detailed historical romance, veteran British author Harrod-Eagles sets young English governess Anne Peters at the center of shifting and cataclysmic events occuring in Russia between 18.
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