The
history of art has produced few works as ambitious and as valuable as
the Amber Room. Famous throughout Europe as “the eighth wonder of
the world,” its vast and intricately worked amber panels were sent
in 1717 by Frederick I of Prussia as a gift to Peter the Great of Russia.
Erected some years later, they quickly became a symbol of Russia’s
imperial might.
For more than two hundred years the Amber Room remained in its Russian
palace outside St. Petersburg (Leningrad), but when the Nazi army invaded Russia and swept
towards Leningrad in 1941, the panels were wrenched from the walls,
packed into crates, and disappeared from view, never to be seen again.
Dozens of people have tried to trace the whereabouts of the Amber Room,
and several of them have died in mysterious circumstances. Adrian Levy
and Catherine Scott-Clark have gone further along the trail of this great
lost treasure than anyone before them, and have unraveled the jumble of
evidence surrounding its fate. Their search catapulted them across eastern
Europe and into the menacing world of espionage and counterespionage that
still surrounds Russia and the former Soviet bloc. In archives in St.
Petersburg and Berlin, amid boxes of hitherto unseen diaries, letters,
and classified reports, they have uncovered for the first time an astounding
conspiracy to hide the truth.
In a gripping climax that is a triumph of detection and narrative journalism,
The Amber Room shows incontrovertibly what really happened to
the most valuable lost artwork in the world, and why the truth has been
withheld for so long.