Part One Banine begins her memoir with an account of her birth in
Baku in
1905, a turbulent year throughout the
Russian Empire. Her family is fabulously wealthy, as her peasant great-grandfather struck oil on his land. Banine's mother dies of post-partum fever, unable to get medical help as inter-ethnic violence rages within the oil-boom city. Banine recalls her early childhood as a very happy time. She and her three older sisters are brought up by a Baltic German governess,
Fräulein Anna, whom Banine adores. This European lifestyle is very different from the traditional Islamic ways of Banine's corpulent grandmother, who lives in her own apartment in the same house. She speaks only Azeri, prays five times a day and swears like a trooper. The extended family spend the long hot summers at their country house near the sea, with its lush garden and vineyards in the midst of a desert. The house is full of poker-playing aunts, uncles and cousins engaged in endless recriminations over division of the family fortune. Weddings, with transvestite dancers for the men's celebrations, women's parties in the hamam, or bath-house, and endless story telling are part of life in the country. Banine's father,
Mirza, marries a Muslim
Ossetian by the name of
Amina who has led a society life in
Moscow. To the shock of her in-laws Amina begins to entertain all sorts of guests, including unmarried young men “of unknown parentage”. Banine realises that marriage and motherhood are not the only life to which she can aspire. Banine's oldest sister elopes with a Russian engineer. She is brought back home, married off to a relative and moves to Moscow. The
October Revolution brings chaos to the
Caucasus. A military dictatorship, dominated by Armenians, grabs power in Baku and hunts down wealthy Azerbaijanis. In the dead of night Banine and her family flee their home to take shelter with their Armenian neighbours. The family sail to
Enzeli in Iran, which is also in the grip of unrest. After
Turkish forces restore calm in Baku, the family sail back home. Banine's father is now minister of commerce in the government of the new independent
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. There are more parties than ever at Banine's home, as the ranks of Baku society have been swollen by refugees from Russia, all awaiting the imminent demise of the
Bolsheviks. Banine's second sister marries and leaves on a trip to Paris with her husband, her stepmother Amina and sister number three. Banine is heartbroken to be left behind, nursing a sense of great injustice and dreaming of Paris. Practically the following day she hears the Internationale being sung in the streets –
Red Army troops have entered Baku. The democratic republic is over and so is Banine's childhood.
Part Two Banine's maternal grandfather
Musa Naghiyev dies and his vast wealth passes to his wife and his four granddaughters – Banine and her sisters. Banine becomes a millionaire just as the Bolsheviks have taken over, so she never takes possession of her inheritance. Banine's father is arrested and thrown in prison. The remaining family spend their last summer in the country, where part of the house is requisitioned as a sanatorium. Banine and her cousin
Gulnar are fascinated by
Gregory, a recuperating Bolshevik, and get caught up in revolutionary fervour to the horror of their grandmother. Banine has a crush on Gregory's friend, the Russian Bolshevik
Andrey. Their house in Baku has been requisitioned too. Cousin Gulnar is desperate to get married, so that once she has lost her virginity she can enjoy as many affairs as she likes. She marries a distant relative and Banine moves in with them in Baku's medieval walled city, where time seems to have stood still. Banine enjoys her first job, teaching music at the eccentric Bolshevik Conservatoire for Muslim Girls. Andrey attends a special concert there and invites Banine to visit him with Gulnar. This she eventually does and they fall in love, spending one chaste night discussing their plans for marriage. However, Banine has a suitor,
Jamil, who through his connections gets her father released from prison. Mirza wants Banine to marry Jamil, as he can help him obtain a passport. She is too scared to tell her father about Andrey so agrees to marry Jamil, whom she cannot bear. She confides in Gulnar, but later wakes to find Gulnar has left with Andrey. Banine marries Jamil – she is fifteen and he is thirty-five. They leave for
Tiflis, where Jamil arranges Mirza's passport, then the Black Sea port of
Batumi, from where Mirza sets sail for
Istanbul. Again Banine feels the loss of being left behind. Back in Baku, Gulnar returns to recriminations and huge family rows. Banine and Jamil eventually obtain passports and leave for Tiflis, Batumi, then Istanbul, where Jamil loses all their money playing poker. Banine leaves for Paris on the
Orient Express, secretly delighted that Jamil has to stay behind, waiting for her father to arrive on business. In four days’ time she reaches the longed-for Paris. == Social History ==