In Paris and London, the crowds hailed him as the man who had conquered
Napoleon, as the liberator of Europe, and as a benevolent, enlightened
monarch. At home he came to be feared as a reactionary, oppressive
autocrat in a country where millions of serfs were still treated as
little more than personal property. A grandson of Catherine the Great, a
conspirator in the assassination of his own father, and an idealistic
and ineffective participant at the Congress of Vienna, Alexander was
torn all his life between his liberal illusions and the hard realities
of autocratic Russia. In a brilliant biography of one of the most
unorthodox of Russia's tsars, Henri Troyat -- winner of the Prix
Populiste and the coveted Prix Goncourt -- delivers a masterful portrait
of Europe during a momentous period in its modern history. [Troyat's]
broad-brush narrative restores to center stage important personalities
and their interplay in the politics of the era. -- James H. Billington,
The New York Times Book Review [A] briskly moving, richly illustrated,
flesh-and-blood portrait. -- Publishers Weekly Troyat's biography of
Alexander ... turns out to be more enthralling than most of the novels
I've read lately. -- Pamela Marsh, The Christian Science Monitor