What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Gentleman in Moscow’

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Updated 01 September 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘A Gentleman in Moscow’

  • Towles keeps the story centered on Rostov’s journey, highlighting the challenges of life under house arrest

Author: Amor Towles

“A Gentleman in Moscow” is a work of historical fiction by American author Amor Towles and set in Russia in the 1920s.

The story follows Count Alexander Rostov, a Russian aristocrat placed under house arrest in Moscow’s Hotel Metropol after the Bolshevik Revolution.

Despite his confinement, Rostov adapts to his surroundings with dignity and determination.

Towles, known for his bestselling novels “Rules of Civility” and “The Lincoln Highway,” published “A Gentleman in Moscow” in 2016. He drew inspiration from his experiences in luxury hotels, particularly one in Geneva in which some guests were permanent residents.

One of the book’s strengths is Towles’ exploration of the human experience. Through Rostov’s eyes, readers witness the changes in Russia that shaped social life.

Towles keeps the story centered on Rostov’s journey, highlighting the challenges of life under house arrest.

The author’s vivid descriptions bring the Hotel Metropol to life, with its ornate interiors and hidden corners serving as the backdrop for Rostov’s daily adventures. He maintains his aristocratic lifestyle while engaging with the world beyond his confinement.

While many have rated the novel as worthy of four stars, some critics have found it slow-paced. Reviewer Rohan Singh Jora said: “This book is eloquently written with the author’s sophisticated knowledge of a true gentleman. Although well-written, some chapters are monotonous and slow-paced.”

However, the book offers a profound look into human psychology, resilience, and hope. Towles’ writing makes the story captivating and leaves a lasting impression on readers.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Bell Jar’

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Updated 20 December 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Bell Jar’

  • The bell jar — clear, enclosing, and distorting the air she breathes — becomes the perfect image of Greenwood’s entrapment. Just as telling is the fig tree she imagines, with each fig representing a possible future: writer, traveler, mother, lover

Author: Sylvia Plath

Sylvia Plath’s “The Bell Jar” (1963) is a raw and luminous portrait of a young woman standing at the edge of adulthood, grappling with ambition, doubt, and the suffocating weight of expectation. 

Through the eyes of the novel’s troubled protagonist Esther Greenwood, Plath reveals the loneliness that can lie hidden beneath achievement and the unease brought on by future expectations.  

The novel opens in New York, where Greenwood’s magazine internship seems the gateway to success. Yet the city’s glamor soon feels hollow, and the confidence around her thin and brittle. 

Her sense of direction begins to fade, and the life laid out before her starts to feel both too small and impossibly distant.  

The bell jar — clear, enclosing, and distorting the air she breathes — becomes the perfect image of Greenwood’s entrapment. Just as telling is the fig tree she imagines, with each fig representing a possible future: writer, traveler, mother, lover. 

Torn between these possibilities, she hesitates until the figs shrivel and drop. This image, perhaps more than any other, reveals how fear of choice can quietly undo a person.   

Plath’s writing is sharp and deeply humane. She exposes the subtle pressures shaping women’s lives at that time without sentiment or complaint. 

The narrative’s erratic rhythm mirrors the character’s disoriented state of mind, where thought and memory blur at the edges. 

“The Bell Jar” speaks to anyone who has felt caught between possibility and paralysis, between who they are and who they are expected to be. 

Plath writes with precision and compassion, turning confusion into clarity and despair into something almost inspiring.