Can’t Wait Wednesday : The Haunting of Moscow House by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore
15 May 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Can't Wait Wedesday, Olesya Salnikova Gilmore, The Haunting of Moscow House, Wishful Endings

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine. Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for. If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to. This week my book is: The Haunting of Moscow House by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore. Here’s the cover and description:

In this elegant gothic horror tale set in post-revolutionary Russia, two formerly aristocratic sisters race to uncover their family’s long-buried secrets in a house haunted by a past dangerous—and deadly—to remember.
It is the summer of 1921, and a group of Bolsheviks have taken over Irina and Lili Goliteva’s ancestral home in Moscow, a stately mansion falling into disrepair and decay. The remaining members of their family are ordered to move into the cramped attic, while the officials take over an entire wing of grand rooms downstairs. The sisters understand it is the way of things and know they must forget their noble upbringing to make their way in this new Soviet Russia. But the house begins to whisper of a traumatic past not as dead as they thought.
Eager to escape it and their unwelcome new landlords, Irina and Lili find jobs with the recently arrived American Relief Administration, meant to ease the post-revolutionary famine in Russia. For the sisters, the ARA provides much-needed food and employment, as well as a chance for sensible Irina to help those less fortunate and artistic Lili to express herself for a good cause. It might just lead them to love, too.
But at home, the spirits of their deceased family awaken, desperate to impart what really happened to them during the Revolution. Soon one of the officials living in the house is found dead. Was his death caused by something supernatural, or by someone all too human? And are Irina and Lili and their family next? Only unearthing the frightening secrets of Moscow House will reveal all. But this means the sisters must dig deep into a past no one in Russia except the dead are allowed to remember.
Expected publication : September 2024
The Witch and the Tsar by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore
6 December 2022
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Olesya Salnikova Gilmore, The Witch and the Tsar
My Five Word TL:DR Review : Epic Retelling of Baba Yaga

The current trend for retelling stories from the perspective of either those characters who lived in the shadows or those that have been misrepresented continues here with a fictional account of Ivan the Terrible and the woman who helped to stop his period of tyranny. Baba Yaga is a figure of folklore, a witch who ate children and lived in a hut with chicken legs. As history shows us women with a knack for healing were often vilified and hunted and tormented and Baba Yaga is often described as a hideous crone – here we have a story with a different perspective. Here we have a woman, half immortal, daughter of a union between a human and a Goddess, with a special connection to the old spirits and Gods, a knack for healing and the ability to communicate with animals and birds. So, to be clear, and I realise this is a long-winded way of saying this, if you’re expecting to read about the ferocious Wicked Witch of Russia then you may wish to look elsewhere. This is a reimagining of a turbulent period of history told through the eyes of a woman who passionately cares about her homeland and will go to great lengths to stop the interfering Gods who are meddling in the lives of its people.
So, a little bit about the plot. The story begins with Yaga, living in the woods and occasionally healing those with enough courage to seek her aid. She has long since learnt to mistrust humans and has become a solitary figure until she receives a visit from an old friend. Anastasia, wife to Ivan IV. Yaga soon discovers that Anastasia is being poisoned and eventually makes the difficult decision to follow her back to Moscow to offer protection. Here she discovers the machinations of a life at court and the political maneuvering that is part and parcel of everyday life. It soon becomes apparent that other forces are at play and if Yaga cannot protect Anastasia, the only person who can keep Ivan’s inner demons at bay, then Russia will fall into chaos.
For me, this is a story in two halves. The first is, I guess something of a set up and an introduction to the characters. The second is much more turbulent with death and destruction aplenty and a much more frenetic pace. Personally, I enjoyed the second half more than the first which isn’t to say I didn’t enjoy the first part of the story, just it felt a little slow in places.
I really enjoyed the writing and the descriptions which I felt helped to pull me into this strange world of wars and scheming Gods. And I also enjoyed the addition of extra characters such as the Tsar’s son along with some of the people that Yaga joined during their fight back against Ivan.
In terms of criticisms. Well, in some ways I felt like Yaga seemed less powerful than I’d imagined her to be – but having said that this is a retelling, and Yaga herself is adamant that she isn’t a witch, I think her powers lie more in communicating with the Gods and moving between different dimensions, also she finds herself almost leading the small rebellion at certain points formulating plans and the like.
Overall, this was very easy to read, I had few expectations going into the read and also very little knowledge of Baba Yaga so I had no preconceptions about how she would come across. I really loved the setting and the way the author pulls you into the story with her little details about everyday life and I thought this ended on a positive note. I seriously would read more about Yaga and given that she ages very slowly I could quite easily see her popping up again at other historic points during Russia’s history.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 4 of 5 stars
Countdown to 2023 – Day 1 ‘Snow’ (30 days remaining)
1 December 2022
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Countdown to 2023, Day 1, Olesya Salnikova Gilmore, Snow, The Witch and the Tsar

Today is the first day of my countdown to 2023. Today’s prompt is snow and I’ve used a book with a wintry setting. The prompts can be found here if you want to join in. I’m hoping to use mostly books read this year. Let’s begin:
SNOW (a cold or wintry setting)
The Witch and the Tsar by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore a recent read that I have yet to review. Set in Russia this one fits the prompt perfectly

Tomorrow: Shopping: the last book added to your wishlist




