'A fascinating jigsaw puzzle of the lost continent of memory' Financial Times 'This book contains multitudes. You don’t have to be an aesthete to love it. To read it is simply to enjoy good company, to revel in sublime writing and to be gently prodded into thoughts on the meaning of freedom and the transformative experience of love. It is a gorgeous book, a tender tribute to two originals and time well spent' The Times 'Larissa leaps off the page, a born survivor with a terrific store of anecdotes: the cousin who was eaten by a bear, or the Matisse painting she stole from the Italian government and ‘repatriated’ to Russia…a warmly sympathetic book. On finishing, you’ll feel a glow that, against all the odds, this unlikely couple got their happy ever after' Daily Mail 'A dramatic love story between two bespectacled art historians sounds implausible. But add in the Montague-Capulet effect of the Iron Curtain, along with a fearless Russian heroine who proved that love can conquer every barrier, and you have an enchanting tale: a completely true one, beautifully written by the art historian and novelist Iain Pears…Pears’s account provides a rollercoaster ride of hopes and fears, of secret trysts in non-aligned Yugoslavia, smuggled letters written in code, the Cuban missile crisis apparently ending all hopes of marriage, and then the threat of the hardline Leonid Brezhnev replacing Khrushchev. Yet a mixture of luck and Larissa’s inspired string-pulling within the Soviet system achieved success against the odds. The couple’s story is a wonderful tribute to the power of love overcoming a soulless ideology' Spectator - Praise for An Instance of the Fingerpost 'One of the very best historical novels ever written' Tom Holland'The kind of book that has you reading it by torchlight under the bedclothes' The Times