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Monday, February 3, 2025

Review: Maya & Natasha: A Novel

Maya & Natasha: A Novel Maya & Natasha: A Novel by Elyse Durham
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

4.5 Stars

Watching (reading about) the growth of these fraternal twin sisters during the aftermath of WWII, seeing them work so hard at ballet to be the best, and hoping to find a little relief from the taboos of the times was fascinating.

I love reading about different times and cultures, so this book was perfect for me. I also love reading about ballet and have done so since I first read the book Ballerina A Novel by Edward Stewart . While the book Maya and Natash does not in any way resemble the highlighted book, it does bring the era into great focus.

The betrayal of one sister pretty much changes things for both of them, and the final betrayal was clever of the author.

An excellent look at Russia during that time period, the 1960s, and family.

*ARC supplied by the publisher HarperCollins, the author, and NetGalley.

View all my reviews


This stunning debut novel set in the fascinating world of Cold War Soviet ballet follows the fates of twin sisters whose bond is competitive, complicated, but never broken.

Maya and Natasha are twin sisters born in the midst of the Siege of Leningrad in 1941 and immediately abandoned by their mother, a prima ballerina at the Kirov Ballet who would rather die than not dance. Taken in by their mother’s best friend at the Kirov, the girls are raised to be dancers themselves. The Vaganova Ballet Academy—and the totalitarian Soviet regime—is the only world they know.

In 1958, now seniors at the Vaganova at the height of the Cold War, all Maya and Natasha and their classmates want is to dance with the Kirov, and to join the company on its tour to America next year. But a new law from the Kremlin upends Maya and Natasha’s due to fears of defection, family members may no longer travel abroad together. The Kirov can only accept one of them.

Maya, long accustomed to living in her sister’s shadow, accepts her bitter fate, until a new dance partner inspires her to dream bigger and practice harder. For the first time—and at the cruelest possible moment—the sisters are equally matched. And then one sister betrays the other, altering their lives forever and splitting them in two, though neither will stray far from the other’s orbit.

As one of the twins pursues her ballet career and experiences a world outside Russia for the first time, the other is cast in an epic film adaptation of War and Peace, produced and financed by the Soviet State. As the Cold War heats up, Maya and Natasha must confront their to East versus West; to the government that saved them versus their dreams of freedom; and, always, to each other.

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