Marmot Library Network
Downloadable Books, Videos, Music, and eBooksReturn to Marmot Library Network Catalog
powered by OverDrive®

Getting Started
  Quick Start Guide
  Digital Help--FAQ
  Check Out Assistance
  Supported Portable Audio Devices

Digital Media Guided Tour

Quick Search
 
 
Advanced Search

Fiction
  All Fiction
  Juvenile Fiction
  Mystery & Thrillers
  Romance
  More...

Nonfiction
  All Nonfiction
  Biography & Autobiography
  Business & Careers
  Language Learning
  More...

Music
  Ballet
  Blues & Jazz
  Chamber Music
  Choral
  More...

Video
  Animation
  Children's Video
  Classic Film
  Comedy
  More...

Collections
  Recently Added eBooks
  OverDrive MP3 Audiobooks
  Always Available
  Recently Added Video
  Recently Added Audiobooks
  Popular Titles
  Recently Added Music
  Lost In The Virtual Stacks
  View all MP3 Audiobooks
  View all WMA Audiobooks
  View all eBooks
  View all Music
  View all Videos

Software

Click image to view full cover
Granny Dan
by 
Danielle Steel
Patrice Donnell
Lewis Arlt
Publisher: Books on Tape
Subject(s):  Fiction
Romance
Language(s):  English
Recommend this title to a friend! Click here.

Format Information

OverDrive WMA Audiobook Add to Book Bag
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
Lending period:   7 days
File size:   75741 KB
ISBN:   9780739346358
Release date:   Jun 27, 2006

Description

"In my eyes she had always been old, always been mine, always been Granny Dan. But in another time, another place, there had been dancing, people, laughter, love. . . . She had had another life before she came to us, long before she came to me. . . .

She was the cherished grandmother who sang songs in Russian, loved to roller-skate, and spoke little of her past. But when Granny Dan died, all that remained was a box wrapped in brown paper, tied with string. Inside, an old pair of satin toe shoes, a gold locket, and a stack of letters tied with ribbon. It was her legacy, her secret past, waiting to be discovered by the granddaughter who loved her but never really knew her. It was a story waiting to be told. . . .

The year was 1902. A new century was dawning as a motherless young girl arrived at a ballet school in St. Petersburg, Russia, at the age of seven. By age seventeen, Danina Petroskova had become a great ballerina, a favorite of the Czar and Czarina, who welcomed her into the heart of the Imperial family. But events both near and far away shook the ground upon which she danced. A war, an extraordinary man, and a devastating illness altered the course of her life. And when revolution shattered Russia, Danina Petroskova was forced to make a heartbreaking choice--as the world around her was about to change forever.

Granny Dan is about the magic of history. In it, Danielle Steel reminds us how little we know of those who came before us - and how, if we could only glimpse into their early lives, and see who they once were, there is so much we would understand and learn. For in this extraordinary novel, a simple box, filled with mementos from a grandmother, offers the greatest legacy of all: an unexpected gift of a life transformed, a long-forgotten history of youth and beauty, love and dreams."

If you like this title, you might also like...

Sisters@
Sisters
Danielle Steel
Amazing Grace@
Amazing Grace
Danielle Steel
Second Chance@
Second Chance
Danielle Steel
Leap of Faith@
Leap of Faith
Danielle Steel

Excerpts

From the book

...

Prologue

The box arrived on a snowy afternoon two weeks before Christmas. It was neatly wrapped, tied with string, and was sitting on my doorstep when I came home with the children. We had stopped in the park on the way home, and I had sat on a bench, watching them, thinking of her again, as I had almost constantly for the last week since her service. There was so much about her I had never known, so much I had only guessed at, so many mysteries to which only she held the key. My greatest regret was not asking her about her life when I had the chance, but just assuming it wasn't important. She was old, after all, how important could it be? I thought I knew everything about her.

She was the grandmother with the dancing eyes who loved to roller-skate with me, even into her late eighties, who baked exquisite little cookies, and spoke to the children in the town where she lived as though they were grown up and understood her. She was very wise, and very funny, and they loved her. And if they pressed her to, she did card tricks for them, which always fascinated them.

She had a lovely voice, played the balalaika, and sang beautiful old ballads in Russian. She always seemed to be singing, or humming, always moving. And to the very end, she was lithe and graceful, loved by all, and admired by everyone who knew her. The church had been surprisingly full for a woman of ninety. Yet none of us really knew her. None of us understood who she had been, or where, or the extraordinary world she had come from. We knew she had been born in Russia and that she arrived in Vermont in 1917, and that she had married my grandfather sometime later. We just assumed she had always been there, part of our lives, just as she was. As one does about old people, we assumed she had always been old.

None of us really knew anything about her, and what lingered in my head were the unanswered questions. All I could ask myself now was why I had never thought to ask her. Why had I never sought the answers to the questions?

My mother had died ten years before and perhaps even she hadn't known the answers or wanted to know them.

My mother had been far more like her father, a serious sort, a sensible woman, a true New Englander, although her father wasn't. But like him, she was a woman of few words and impenetrable emotions. Little said, little known, and seemingly uninterested in the mysteries of other worlds, or the lives of others. She went to the supermarket when there were specials on tomatoes and strawberries, she was a practical person who lived in a material world, and had little in common with her own mother. The word that best described my own mother was solid, which is not the word anyone would have used to describe her mother, Granny Dan, as I called her.

Granny Dan was magic. Granny Dan seemed to be made up of air and fairy dust and angel wings, all things magical and luminous and graceful. The two women seemed to have nothing in common with each other, and it was always my grandmother who drew me to her like a magnet, whose warmth and gentleness touched my heart with countless unspoken graceful gestures. It was Granny Dan I loved most of all, and whom I was missing so desperately that snowy afternoon in the park, wondering what I would do without her. She had died ten days before, at ninety.

When my mother died at fifty-four, I was sorry, and knew I would miss her. I would miss the stability she represented to me, the reliability, the place to come home to. My father married her best friend the year after she died, and even that didn't particularly shock me. He was sixty-five, had a bad heart, and needed someone there at night to...

 

Reviews

AudioFile Magazine...
Readers Patrice Donnell and Lewis Arlt weave a tale of romance, intrigue and revolution in Russia. Motherless Danina sacrifices all to become a prima ballerina; later her beloved granddaughter, to whom she is Granny Dan, knows nothing about her past. Ballet teacher Madame Markova, portrayed by Arlt with uncompromising ferocity, is also depicted with the soft tones of a mother's love. A doctor, Danina's lover, who nurses her to health after near death from influenza, is portrayed initially with a voice of authority, then love, then pleading, as he begs her to leave Russia when the revolution begins. The readers create an enchanted tale. G.D.W. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine
 

Digital Rights Information

OverDrive WMA Audiobook
Burn to CD: Not permitted
 
Transfer to device: Permitted (3 times)
   Transfer to Apple® device: Permitted
 
Public performance: Not permitted
File-sharing: Not permitted
Peer-to-peer usage: Not permitted
 
All copies of this title, including those transferred to portable devices and other media, must be deleted/destroyed at the end of the lending period.