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    A Russian Requiem

    A Russian Requiem

    by Roland Merullo


    eBook

    $9.99
    $9.99

    Customer Reviews

      BN ID: 2940012206527
    • Publisher: AJAR Contemporaries
    • Publication date: 03/02/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 461
    • File size: 592 KB

    Roland Merullo is the author of twelve books, including In Revere, In Those Days, a Booklist Editors’ Choice, and Breakfast with Buddha, nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. His new novel, The Talk-Funny Girl will be published in spring 2011. He lives in western Massachusetts with his wife and two daughters. For more information, visit www.rolandmerullo.com

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    Two weeks before the failed right-wing coup of August 1991, Anton Czesich, an American in his late forties who has spent a mostly disillusioning career working overseas for the U.S. government, arrives in Moscow to take charge of a volatile American food distribution program—a program administered by Julie Stirvin, the love of his youth. She and Czesich have their own history, their own protracted cold war. Many miles away, in the mining center of Vostok, Soviet bureaucrat Serghei Propenko, a former champion boxer, is in the midst of his own midlife crisis—partly personal, partly political. Modest and decent, surrounded by a household of strong-willed and politically astute women, Propenko is pinched between his traditional ambitions and concern for his very untraditional daughter, Lydia. As Czesich's and Propenko's fates intersect, it becomes clear that both men are partially paralyzed by the same suspicions and fears that crippled Soviet-American relations for so long.

    A Russian Requiem is a page-turner with depth, a finely crafted novel about the small piece of history each of us bears and the way our intimate lives reflect and echo in the politics of nations. Speckled with humor and irony, rich in both psychological and political drama, it carries the reader on a post-cold war voyage through the Russian—and American—soul.

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    Publishers Weekly
    Merullo skillfully explores the lives of ordinary people caught in a dramatic transference of power…it is smoothly written and multifaceted, solidly depicting the isolation and poverty of a city far removed from Moscow and insightfully exploring the psyches of individuals caught in the conflicts between their ideals and their careers.
    Kirkus Reviews
    Based on an intimate knowledge of the Soviet Union, Merullo's timely and intriguing narrative juxtaposes the careers of two bureaucrats--both decent, ordinary men who find themselves acting heroically after years of mistakes and compromises. …A moving novel--with great cinematic potential--that brilliantly captures the historically tense moment of Russia on the verge of freedom, just before the attempted coup and the Party's last gasps.
    Joe McGinniss
    The scope, power, and magnitude of this book amazed me... Merullo's understanding of the Russian soul goes far beyond that of any other American author I've ever read. If I were to pick the one book this reminds me of more than any other, it would The Quiet American, the Graham Greene novel... But in many ways I think A Russian Requiem is better
    Craig Nova
    A Russian Requiem has the brilliance that only comes when a gifted storyteller has had substantial experience with his subject. It is a remarkable book... beautifully written, filled with large characters clearly rendered. –
    Howard Frank Mosher
    In its gritty authenticity, its keen political and historical savvy, its heartfelt grasp of a human and national tragedy, and most of all its splendid characters, A Russian Requiem is one of the best novels I’ve read in years.”
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