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I, Vera

The Many Lives of Vera Gedroits, a Radical Princess

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I, Vera

Written by: Miranda Seymour
Narrated by: Sofia Engstrand
Free with 30-day trial

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'Vera Gedroits was a true medical heroine: outrageous, intrepid and devoted to saving lives. Miranda Seymour’s genius as a story teller brings this astonishing woman blazing back to life. I shall never forget her' LADY ANTONIA FRASER

'Miranda Seymour has written a wonderful and unputdownable book about an astonishing woman' MEL GIEDROYC

Vera Gedroits was a towering, sweet-faced lesbian princess, an ardent supporter of workers’ rights who regularly performed true medical miracles of surgery. On one occasion, she even frogmarched an inquisitive Rasputin out of a ward for wounded officers.

While working for César Roux at the world’s best known medical institute in Lausanne, Vera became the world’s first woman surgeon. Off the back of this, she was appointed by the doomed Tsarina to teach the women of the Romanov family how to be nurses.

In 1919, Vera was sent to Kyiv, where her hospital reforms, innovative work and academic papers crowned an extraordinary career. During the troubled 1920s, in times of extreme danger, she completed a remarkable series of memoirs. The princess-surgeon’s prose, including a startling candid account of her early years as a revolutionary factory doctor, has been compared to that of Pasternak.

Some years later, Vera and her widowed lover Countess Maria Nirod were seized in the middle of the night and taken away at gunpoint during the Soviet purge of scientific intellectuals. Their whereabouts for the next few months were never disclosed. Vera’s pension was cancelled. The hospital and institute were closed. Living in extreme poverty, Vera died two years later of uterine cancer. She was just 61.

The princess’s name was removed from official Soviet medical records; her tremendous contribution to medicine and the radical improvements to wartime surgery she pioneered as the first female battlefield surgeon have remained unacknowledged to this day. Now, Miranda Seymour uncovers the riveting story of a daring and brilliant woman who chose to make Ukraine her homeland, someone adored by her friends and patients and whose achievements as an administrator and bold reformer invite comparisons to Florence Nightingale.

‘The extraordinary story of an extraordinary woman, whose unprecedented career as a surgeon, and also as a writer, made her a participant in every aspect of late Tsarist and early Soviet history, and at every level of Russian society … Miranda Seymour tells her story with compelling passion and the most extraordinarily wide understanding of the history and politics, the medicine and literature of the times. A remarkable book’ MICHAEL FRAYN

©2026 Miranda Seymour (P)2026 HarperCollins Publishers
20th Century Biographies & Memoirs Medical Medicine & Health Care Industry Modern Professionals & Academics Russia
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Critic Reviews

'You wouldn’t want to mess with Vera Gedroits, a no-nonsense specimen of womanhood…Seymour, an accomplished storyteller, is a lovely, clear writer…it’s always bliss when Seymour gives us another glimpse of Gedroits, a charismatic and commanding presence in real life and on the page. At one point Seymour tells us that “vodka had always been Vera’s favourite tipple; now she started to up her intake of cigarettes, finding that papirosi roll-ups, while hugely addictive, added a hoarser rasp to her low and melodious voice… What a woman'
The Times
'I, Vera is an electric biography, with Gedroits’s life as a junction box housing wires that lead to almost every live current of her era. As the narrative courses along, Seymour gives her reader micro-histories of the medical field, the war casualties Gedroits witnessed as an army doctor, the Bolshevik Revolution and Ukraine (Gedroits settled in Kyiv towards the end of her life)'
Daily Telegraph
'How refreshing that Miranda Seymour should choose an absolute unknown to write about, whose life was genuinely interesting and surprising … she has uncovered a particularly entrancing story to beguile us with'
Spectator
‘A flabbergasting story. Gripping, often startling and full of frankly incredible plot twists, Vera reads like a thriller, and one I could hardly bear to put down’
Hilary Spurling
‘Remarkable. A compulsive tour de force’
Colin Thubron
‘A thrilling masterpiece of biographical reconstruction. Miranda Seymour has discovered a magnetic character, whose enthralling, bold, but until now little known life moves at the speed of a comet’
Alexander Masters
‘As bright-eyed as a vixen and cheerful as a young bear, the scalpel-wielding, bear-hunting, lesbian, revolutionary yet imperial surgeon Vera is a force to behold. A one-off ever there was one’
Clare Mulley
‘This biography is an absolute revelation… brilliantly researched and illuminating’
Helen Rappaport
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