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Book review: The Last Palace

A former US ambassador, the author has drawn on his experience in this book

November 26, 2018 15:05
Norman Eisen (Photo: Getty Images)
1 min read

The Last Palace
By Norman Eisen, Headline, £25

History books have long explored the lives of great individuals, families or countries. Today, the choice of subjects is wider. In Behold, America, for example, Sarah Churchwell addressed two familiar expressions: “the American dream” and “America first”. And now, Norman Eisen has made a grand, neo-classicist building in Prague the protagonist of his book, The Last Palace.

It begins — as many a Jewish man’s book does! — with his mother. When President Obama appointed Eisen to the post of US ambassador to the Czech Republic in 2011, after an illustrious legal career, Eisen’s mother Frieda was less than thrilled. “You know what happened to us there,” she said, referring to the Nazis having deported her family to Auschwitz in 1944. Eisen countered that his appointment was a victory, and was soon spellbound by the ambassador’s palatial residence in Prague, where he served until 2014.

His book examines the life of the palace’s creator, Otto Petchek, who came from a cultured Jewish Rothschild-like family, not unlike the Efrussis in Edmund de Waal’s The Hare with Amber Eyes, or the Zuckerkandls, who ran the grand salons of Vienna.