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News

Articles
Title
AD: Maya Kucherskaya, Alexander Kabakov, and Alexei Makushinsky at the 2014 BuchWein Fair
JUST PUBLISHED: Non-Memoirs by Lotman in Spanish
AD: Lecture by Elena Kostioukovitch in Tokyo
JUST PUBLISHED: The Old House Under the Cypress Tree by Fazil Iskander in Italy
JUST PUBLISHED: All Our Lord´s Men by Ulitskaya in Korea
JUST PUBLISHED: Non-Memoirs by Lotman in English
Ludmila Ulitskaya in France, September 2014
Master-class by Elena Kostioukovich in Ca' Foscari University
Elena Kostioukovitch at the III International Congress of Literary Translators
Elena Kostioukovitch at the Turin Epicurean Capital
Ludmila Ulitskaya awarded the Austrian State Prize for European Literature 2014
Ulitskaya and Kostioukovitch at the 2014 La Milanesiana
JUST PUBLISHED: Memories of Agnes Mironova in Poland
PEN International conference in Stockholm, June 9, 2014
Maya Kucherskaya at the Warsaw Book Fair in May, 2014

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Featured titles

  • A School for Fools, a novel by Sasha Sokolov (1976)

    Rights sold: Bulgaria - FAKEL, Brazil – ARS POETICA, Czech Republic - PROSTOR, Denmark - Munksgaard/Rosinante, Estonia – EESTI RAAMAT, France – SOLIN, Germany – SUHRKAMP, Greece – KOLLAROS, Hungary – NAPKUT, Israel - CARMEL, Italy – SALANI , Japan - Kawade Shobo Shinsha, Korea – MUNHAKDONGNE, Latvia – ZVAIGZNE, Lithuania - VAGA, Mongolia - MASH NUUTS MEDIA, The Netherlands – BEZIGE BIJ, VAN OORSCHOT, Poland – KONTRA, Portugal - CAVALO DE FERRO (PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE), Romania - ALLFA, Russia - AZBOOKA, OGI, Serbia – FILIP VIŠNJIC, Spain – CIRCULO DE LECTORES, MARBOT, Sweden – AWE/GEBERS, Switzerland – ZOÉ, Taiwan (Traditional Chinese language) - CHI MING, Turkey - TIMAŞ, USA – ARDIS, NYRB, World Arabic - NCT (Egypt)

    A School for Fools is a journey through the mental landscape of a nameless, schizophrenic adolescent which he relates with the assistance of an author figure who may be the boy's older self. Through the kaleidoscopic prism of the teenager's schizoid mind, we share his bizarre perceptions and attempts to come to terms with the surrounding world.

    Sokolov's A School for Fools has been called "a neglected masterpiece. Compared to Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago or Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, Sokolov's brilliant novella shares with them the distinction of being one of the very few Russian novels to remain steadily in print. Pasternak's and Solzhenitsyn's novels are a continuation of the great nineteenth-century Russian literary tradition, Sokolov's marks the beginning of a new one.

    Read more...
  • Only a Miracle Could Save Us: Life and Survival under Stalin's Terror, by Irina Sherbakova (NF)

    Rights sold: Germany  - CAMPUS

    For many years, we knew next to nothing about the private lives of ordinary Soviet citizens during Stalin’s reign. Until very recently, the social history of the Soviet Union written by Soviet and Western historians alike was limited entirely to the public sphere – politics and ideology, and the collective experience of the ‘Soviet masses’. The individual (insofar as he or she appeared at all) featured mainly as a letter-writer to the Soviet authorities (that is, as a public actor rather than a private person or member of a family).

    It was only from the end of the 1980s that the practice of oral history – politically impossible in the earlier Soviet period – began to develop in Russia. Public organizations like Memorial, established in the late 1980s to represent the victims of repression and record their history, took the lead, collecting testimonies from survivors of the Gulag. This was an urgent and important task in the glasnost period because these survivors were disappearing fast and because their memories were practically the only source of reliable information about life inside the camps.

    Russian journalist and historian Irina Sherbakova of Memorial in Moscow was one of these who interviewed many Gulag survivors…

    For her new book Sherbakova has selected the five life stories, five examples of oral history, each in its own way depicting the inhuman policy of Soviet regime during different stages of Stalin’s reign. Among her protagonists are the biologist who was arrested as a ‘wife of an enemy of the people’ and even in prison remained a convinced follower of the Communist ideology; the young Trotskyist who survived through many Gulag prison camps; the son of a German actress who was pursued solely because of his origin;  the Red Army officer to whom a single joke about Stalin cost career and freedom… Sherbakova begins a book with the story of her own family, with recollections of her grandfather, who was a Bolshevik and a member of the Comintern and later fell into disfavor.


    Unlike other East European countries, Russia is not striving for a critical appraisal of its Communist past. A dedicated work of Memorial society members, including Irina Sherbakova, is a rare exception. Sherbakova have definitely chosen the only correct method of presentation, because the terror of Stalinism can not be expressed in abstract numbers. Much more impressive is the presentation of an individual biographies, each reflecting the precarious history of the Soviet Union.

    Read more...

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