reviews

The New Moscow Philosophy
Vyacheslav Pyetsukh (Twisted Spoon, $16)

The Sky is Falling
Caroline Adderson (Thomas Allen, $32.95)

Separate Kingdoms
Valerie Laken (Harper, $14.99)

“It should come as no surprise,” writes Vyacheslav Pyetsukh at the beginning of The New Moscow Philosophy, “that where literature goes life follows, that Russians not only write what they live but in part live what they write…”

The New Moscow Philosophy

The infusion of Russian literature into life is a theme central to all three of these new fiction offerings – from a Russian, a Canadian and an American. Pyetsukh’s absurd novel (published in Russian in 1989 and only now translated – very fluidly – by Krystyna Anna Steiger) ruminates on this aspect self-consciously, spinning a murder mystery out of a riff on Raskolnikov’s killing of the old woman in Crime and Punishment, while at the same time considering why Russians’ sense of self (National Idea, anyone?) is so bound up with their internal discourse. Not unlike, perhaps, a Raskolnikovian internal monologue.

The Sky is Falling

Pyetsukh’s Dostoyevskian drama unfolds in a Moscow communal apartment at Petroverigsky Lane 12, in the mid- to late-1980s. Meanwhile, halfway around the world, in Caroline Adderson’s stunningly visual novel The Sky is Falling, the story centers on a Canadian communal apartment of sorts during the same era. The main character Jane, is at university studying Russian literature, and has just moved into a home she will share with three other students, each trying to be more radical than the next. Jane soon finds the lines blurring between life and Russian literature. Indeed, the novel begins with a Chekhovian off-stage shot: the downing of KAL 007 by a Soviet MiG. Galvanized by their fear of nuclear war, the housemates become involved in the anti-nuclear movement and launch on trajectories that, 20 years on, none of them could have anticipated.

Separate Kingdoms

But then, who of us living through the 1980s foresaw the changes on the horizon? That in 2011 Russia and the U.S. would lock horns not over nuclear launch vehicles but over the rules for transnational adoption? Valerie Laken (herself a student of Russian and one who lived and worked in Russia in the 1990s, after having grown up in Rockford, IL, sensing very palpably the global nuclear threat), in her powerful story collection Separate Kingdoms, evokes this brave new world and all the unexpected effects it has had on Russians, on foreigners trying to live in Russia, on Americans trying to live as Americans. Not all the stories in this collection have a Russian tinge, but enough do to make this a noteworthy aspect that should give ample reason for Russophiles to take an interest in Laken’s moving stories.

Review: Three World War Two Histories

September 1, 2011

Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin Timothy Snyder (Basic Books, $29.95) Leningrad Anna Reid (Walker, $30) The Damned and the Dead Frank Ellis (Kansas, $34.95) It is the great, cruel paradox of World War II in Russia that heinous, unanswered crimes coexisted with truly heroic, astonishing human achievement. That – be it out of fear [...]

Read the full article →

A Summer Film

July 20, 2011

And by “Summer Film” I don’t mean a blockbuster with special-effects, but a languorous film about summer, filled with that particular blend of ennui, humor, carefully written dialog and profound insight into human nature that was typical of Anton Pavlovich Chekhov. This week, the 2009 film The Duel, directed by Dover Koshashvili, final migrated to [...]

Read the full article →

Summer Reading List

July 15, 2011

The Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine Alina Bronsky (Europa Editions, $15) From the first page of this book, we know we are not supposed to like Rosalinda Achmetowna, the conniving Tatar matriarch and relentlessly unreliable narrator of Bronsky’s new novel. And yet, somehow, Rosa’s evil streak is lovable, her self-deception endearing, as in her [...]

Read the full article →

Review: The Trinity Six

March 15, 2011

I love a good thriller, and so was excited to get this review copy in the mail last month. The premise is interesting, the characters mainly believable, and the well-layered plot drives you along, just not as intensely as I would have liked. I won’t offer any spoilers, but the general idea is that the [...]

Read the full article →

Review: Dacha Idylls

March 8, 2011

Dacha Idylls by Melissa L. Caldwell (University of California Press) Anthropologist Melissa Caldwell admits to having had a hard time convincing professional colleagues that it was “field work” to follow Russians to their dachas, relax with them in the banya, drink tea on the porch and hunt for mushrooms and berries. But, the reality, she [...]

Read the full article →

Review: Molotov’s Magic Lantern

March 5, 2011

Molotov’s Magic Lantern, by Rachel Polonsky Farrar, Straus and Giroux A discovered library once owned by Vyacheslav Molotov, who was apparently an ardent bibliophile, provides the pretext for a string of fascinating forays into Russian history, literature, science and life. Polonsky writes beautifully, in the dense manner of Helprin or Hempel, forcing the reader to [...]

Read the full article →