Snow in May
Material type:
- 9780007548729
- F/ MEL
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Colombo Fiction | Fiction | F/ MEL |
Available
Order online |
CA00027523 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
SHORTLISTED FOR THE DYLAN THOMAS PRIZE
The stories of Kseniya Melnik's debut collection are small-town miracles, each a miniature epic.
Their focus is Magadan, a town in the Northern Far East of Russia, and the unvisited lives of its inhabitants and emigrants - schoolchildren, doctors, teachers, mothers, daughters. Some characters span several stories. Some of their stories span decades and continents. The measure of their telling, though, is invariably the measure of everyday existence. Their dramas, too, are made of quotidian stuff, each life with its own sly or suppressed tragedies, and its brief, often unexpected ecstasies.
Kseniya Melnik's sensibility is sober and humorous; her stories are moving and funny. In their patient, deliberate unfolding - at once surprising and convincing - and in the fitness of their details - vital because they are suggestive - we sense, above all, an assurance that is dazzling.
8.99 GBP
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Melnik models her debut on J.D. Salinger's Nine Stories by creating nine slice-of-life portraits that introduce us to a series of interrelated characters living in Magdan, Russia. The protagonists live in different decades, vary in age, and each experience different trials-yet they all carry the soul of Magdan. The stories involve the KGB, Russian dance, witch doctors, unhealthy love, neglected children, and inescapable poverty. The thematic explorations of the collection are similarly far-ranging: the inner battle between desire and responsibility ("Love, Italian Style, or in Line for Bananas"); the tendency to over-idealize the past ("Closed Fracture"); the demons of addiction ("Strawberry Lipstick"); and the sacrifices required to love freely ("Our Upstairs Neighbor") . Although each of the nine stories can stand on its own, they have a cumulative effect when read together. Melnik tackles tragic subject matter while dramatizing daily struggles, giving equal weight to both. With dry humor and detailed description, Melnik creates a historically enlightening time capsule of an unfamiliar world. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Booklist Review
*Starred Review* In her first book, Melnik's nine tender, linked stories constitute a stark mural painted against the backdrop of political change in late-twentieth-century Russia and the Soviet Union, images only a Russian could craft. Pre-perestroika, post-perestroika, it all makes little difference to the residents of cold, snowbound Magadan on the northeast Russian coast. Melnik knows these people well, and portrays them and their determination, stoicism in the face of regime changes, and dry sense of dark humor with an economy of language that mirrors their economy of life. There is the young mid-century woman who yearns only to escape the crowded bed she shares with her two sisters and who grasps at the only available route, marriage. She learns too late that life as a military officer's wife can be its own punishment. The glasnost generation differs little, caught up as it is in the fantasies that television delivers. It's difficult to pick a favorite among Melnik's striking tales, but Love, Italian Style, the story of busy working mother Tanya on a trip from Magadan to Moscow to stock up on provisions, creates a surge of poignancy that sets the tone for all the others in this affecting and timely collection.--Chavez, Donna Copyright 2014 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.