To Kill a Serpent in the Shell dramatizes the final year of Tsarevna
Sofia's regency, interrogating Russia's history while subtly confronting
the Russia of today. The play, both a riddle and a fantasy, depicts the
political rivalry between the regent and her lover, Vasili Golitsyn, on
the one hand, and the young Tsar Peter on the other.
The regency's incipient humanism, espoused in Golitsyn's consideration
for the well-being of the Russian people, conflicts with the autocratic
leanings of the young Tsar Peter. Boris Akunin shows us a pivotal time
in Russian history, immediately preceding the reign of Peter the Great,
and invites us to imagine what future rulers of Russia might have been
like if the events of 1689 had had a different outcome.