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Russia, 1881. The old world is trembling.
Elizaveta Georgievna Barvoskaya has known only privilege: a vast estate at Yetovna, the Moscow seasons, the rigid expectations of her class. Watched over by her beloved Nyanya, educated by French governesses, observed by a mother whose cool elegance conceals its own mysteries, Elizaveta grows up surrounded by comfort she cannot quite trust. Something has been loosening in her since childhood: a thread pulled free by the lives she glimpsed beyond her own, such as the peasants in the fields, the servants in the kitchen, the faces pressed against the glass of a world she was never meant to question.
When she joins the revolutionary underground, she moves into a world of safe houses, coded messages, and people willing to die for an idea. Among them is Aleksandr (or Sasha), brilliant, driven, marked by a past that shadows everything he touches, and something else she had not anticipated: the possibility of becoming, at last, entirely herself. But the underground is not a place of abstractions. It is dangerous, unforgiving, and moving with terrible purpose toward a single act that will change the course of Russian history.
Set against the darkening world of Tsarist Russia, The Rim of the Sky moves between two worlds with the assurance of a writer who knows both intimately: the gilded drawing rooms and country estates of the Russian nobility, and the shadow world of revolutionaries who have renounced everything that world represents. Natalie Scott writes with rare precision about the texture of a childhood, the cost of a conviction, the way love and ideology can become indistinguishable from each other when the stakes are absolute.
This is a novel of extraordinary moral intelligence. It asks what it costs to act on what you believe, and what it costs not to. It asks what we owe to history, and what history owes to us. And it reminds us that the people who change the world are not always the ones who survive it.
The Rim of the Sky has been completed by 97-year-old Natalie Scott. It is a work that has been worth every year of its waiting.
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