The Russian Dreambook of Color and Flight
Gina Ochsner
Availability:
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Ebook in EPUB format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Publisher:
Open Road Media
Open Road Media
DRM:
Watermark
Watermark
Publication Year:
2011
2011
ISBN-13:
9780547488417
Description:
<DIV><B>The tenants of a post-Soviet slum face the absurdity of Russian life in this Flannery O’Connor Award–winning debut novel “of startling redemptive beauty” (<I>The</I><I>New York Times Book Review</I>).</B><BR /><BR /> In a crumbling apartment building in post-Soviet Russia, there’s a ghost who won’t keep quiet.<BR />  <BR /> Mircha fell from the roof and was never properly buried, so he sticks around to heckle the living: his wife, Azade; Olga, a disillusioned translator/censor for a military newspaper; Yuri, an army veteran who always wears an aviator’s helmet; and Tanya.<BR />  <BR /> Tanya carries a notebook wherever she goes, recording her observations and her dreams of finding love and escaping her job at the All-Russia All-Cosmopolitan Museum, a place which holds a fantastic and terrible collection of art knockoffs created using the tools at hand, from foam to chewing gum, Popsicle sticks to tomato juice. When the museum’s director hears of a mysterious American group seeking to fund art in Russia, it looks like she might get her chance at a better life, if she can only convince them of the collection’s worth. Enlisting the help of Azade, Olga, and even Mircha, Tanya scrambles to save her dreams and her neighbors, and along the way discovers that love may have been waiting in her own courtyard all along.<BR />  <BR /> This is a “delightful” novel by an author who has won two Oregon Book Awards and the Raymond Carver Prize, among other literary honors (<I>Minneapolis Star-Tribune</I>).<BR />  <BR /> “A crazy adventure of the imagination . . . [that] has echoes of Jonathan Safran Foer’s <I>Everything Is Illuminated</I>, Gary Shteyngart’s laugh-out-loud <I>Absurdistan</I> and Olga Grushin’s more romantic <I>The Dream Life of Sukhanov</I>.” —<I>The Observer</I> (UK)</DIV>
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