Description
'Nothing stays dead in Russia ...' A bewitching novel of post-Soviet lives that moves between the magical, the comical and the transcendent to portray a people who rely on dreams to defy the coming of dereliction and decay.
About the Author
Born in 1970, GINA OCHSNER has worked as a dog-walker, a substitute teacher, and in a shop selling cheese and puppets, and now lives in western Oregon with her husband and four children.Her collection of stories People I Wanted to Be was published to wide acclaim in 2005.
Reviews
This is a crazy adventure of the imagination, both hilarious and occasionally puzzling. With it, Ochsner joins a small but inspiring band of US-based (she lives in Oregon) writers exploring the post-Soviet landscape. This book has echoes of Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything Is Illuminated, Gary Shteyngart's laugh-out-loud Absurdistan and Olga Grushin's more romantic The Dream Life of Sukhanov. -- Viv Groskop * Observer *
Ochsner's first achievement is to make us feel intensely complicit in the tragicomedy of her characters ... Her second feat is the prose, which sparkles with wit and originality at every turn, while the characters' inner worlds glow with humanity ... Ochsner has created a heartbreaking comic masterpiece that already has a place in the literature of protest. -- Kapka Kassabova * Guardian *
From Gogol to Bulgakov, Russian literature has long deployed surrealism as a means of confronting the absurdity of Russia's governments ... Oschner paints a vibrant portrait of a community with featherweight beauty and gentle humour. -- Claire Allfree * Metro *
The Russian Dreambook of Colour and Flight joins a vibrant history of magical realism ... Ochsner is a true artist. -- Megan Walsh * The Times *
Gina Ochsner's debut novel proves every bit as magical and engaging as her short-story collection, People I Wanted to Be ... Ochsner balances surreal and real with a light touch ... Ochsner has a talent for striking images, and she's quirkily funny ... plenty of touching moments. -- Marianne Brace * Independent *
For writers of the present moment, Russian and non-Russian, the Yeltsin years have become a cauldron for a wildly imaginative, surreal literature grounded in post-Soviet exigency, a chilly Macondo stretching over 11 time zones. [...] Gina Ochsner, an Oregon native, sticks her ladle into the same overhead pot and, with luminous writing, affection for her characters and, especially, faith in language's humanizing power, manages to find a portion of hopefulness. -- Ken Kalfus * New York Times *
Awards
Long-listed for Orange Prize for Fiction 2009 (UK).
Book Information
ISBN 9781846270093
Author Gina Ochsner
Format Paperback
Page Count 384
Imprint Granta Books
Publisher Granta Books
Weight(grams) 368g
Dimensions(mm) 198mm * 128mm * 26mm