Gå direkt till innehållet
  1. Böcker
  2. Facklitteratur
  3. Biografier & memoarer

Kutchinsky's Egg

Författare:
Inbunden, 2026
engelska
314 kr
Lägsta pris på PriceRunner

A heart-stopping family memoir about art, obsession, and love as the author searches for the spectacular jeweled egg that consumed her fathers dreams and spelled her familys downfall.

"An extraordinary family story and a strange, poignant portrait of obsession." Sophie Elmhirst, New York Times bestselling author of A Marriage at Sea

When she was eleven years old, Serena Kutchinskys life changed forever. Her father Paul, who owned the high-end jewelry company the House of Kutchinsky, set out to create the worlds largest jeweled eggone to rival Fabergs masterpieces. He succeeded, but at a ruinous price.

The Argyle Library Egg was astonishing: two feet tall, made of solid gold, and dripping with pink diamonds. But when Paul was unable to secure a buyer, the House of Kutchinsky collapsed, his marriage fell apart, and he sank into a spiral of drink and drugs. Within ten years he was dead. As for the egg, it was seized by business partners and disappeared without a trace.

Over time, the mystery of the egg began to eat away at Serena. Why did her father risk everything for the pursuit of this audacious dream? And where in the world was his extravagant, ill-fated creation, which had been lost for decades and was estimated to now be worth more than 30 million. Desperate for answers, she set out in search of the eggand an elusive understanding of her late father. The journey begins in Londons impoverished East End where her great-great-grandparents arrived as Jewish immigrants from Russiaand ends in the most unexpected of places.

Echoing the intimacy of The Hare with Amber Eyes, Kutchinskys Egg is a spellbinding historical mystery that explores the glittering yet shadowy world of high-end jewelry, the rise and fall of a family empire, and the complex bond between a father and daughter.

ISBN
9781668079096
Språk
engelska
Vikt
467 gram
Utgivningsdatum
2026-03-31
Förlag
Scribner
Sidor
320