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    Country of Red Azaleas

    Country of Red Azaleas

    by Domnica Radulescu


    eBook

    $13.99
    $13.99

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9781455590438
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Publication date: 04/05/2016
    • Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
    • Format: eBook
    • File size: 2 MB

    Domnica Radulescu is a distinguished professor of French and Italian literature at Washington and Lee University, a Fulbright scholar, and an award-winning playwright. She escaped the Communist dictatorship in her native Romania in 1983 and settled in the United States as a political refugee. Radulescu is the author of two novels, Train to Trieste, which won the Library of Virginia Fiction Award, and Black Sea Twilight.

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    A riveting novel about two women--one Serbian, one Bosnian--whose deep friendship spans decades and continents, war and peace, love and estrangement, in the vein of Elena Ferrante and Julia Alvarez.

    From the moment Marija walks into Lara's classroom, freshly moved to Serbia from Sarajevo, Lara is enchanted by her vibrant beauty, confidence, and wild energy--and knows that the two are destined to be lifelong friends. Closer than sisters, the girls share everything, from stolen fruit and Hollywood movies as girls to philosophies and even lovers as young women. But when the Bosnian War pits their homelands against each other in a bloodbath, Lara and Marija are forced to separate for the first time: romantic Lara heads to America with her Hollywood-handsome new husband, and fierce Marija returns to her native Sarajevo to combat the war through journalism behind Bosnian lines.

    In America, Lara seeks fulfillment through work and family, but when news from Marija ceases, the uncertainty torments Lara, driving her on a quest to find her friend. As Lara travels through war-torn Serbia and Bosnia, following clues that may yet lead to the flesh-and-blood Marija, she must also wrestle with truths about her own identity.

    Told in lush, vivid prose, COUNTRY OF RED AZALEAS is a poignant testament to both the power of friendship and our ability to find meaning and beauty in the face of devastation.

    *Includes Reading Group Guide*

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    Publishers Weekly
    02/29/2016
    Amid the disintegration of Yugoslavia in the last two decades of the 20th century, a Serbian girl, Lara, chronicles her obsession with Marijaher, her beloved Bosnian friend. Lara meets “the girl from Sarajevo” at school in Belgrade when they are seven. The two girls grow up sharing everything, from summer holidays to student protests. Marija is the charismatic leader, Lara the adoring follower. As the political situation becomes grave, the two friends part when Lara leaves for Washington, D.C., with her American husband. Lara loses touch with Marija as war destroys their homeland. When the conflict subsides and Marija finally surfaces, she’s suffered unspeakable tragedy—she has been raped, and her family slaughtered. Lara’s sheltered life unravels too, possibly because she is so far removed from her true self. Finally reunited with the damaged Marija, Lara embarks on a journey of healing with her cherished friend. Radulescu’s (Train to Trieste) subject matter demands a writing style and tone to match its gravity; instead this book is awash with overwrought, overwritten sentimentality. As a result, Lara and Marija’s story never really comes together for the reader. (Apr.)
    From the Publisher
    "A moving portrait of humanity's best overcoming humanity's worst."—Kirkus Reviews

    "A tightly wrought, beautiful story of friendship...Radulescu creates images that lodge themselves firmly in your consciousness, giving you ideas to ponder long after you turn the final page. In the tradition of Elena Ferrante and Khaled Hosseini, COUNTRY OF RED AZALEAS prevails as a true testament to a bond that transcends the devastation of war."—BookPage

    "A compelling tale...Radulescu's prose is fluid and languid—even when she's describing the madness of war. Her pacing is perfect."—Associated Press

    "Filled with full-bodied, multifaceted characters... a profoundly uplifting and optimistic novel...a gripping story, important for its poignancy as well as its insights into the human condition."—Washington Independent Review of Books

    "This exquisite novel celebrates the bonds of female friendship and the spirit of women's resilience and self-invention. A riveting and beautifully written novel, COUNTRY OF RED AZALEAS sheds light on our transcendent human connections in the face of war, exile, and displacement."—Jasmin Darznik, New York Times bestselling author of The Good Daughter

    "Packs a lot into a swift, emotionally wrought chronicle...the novel wallops us with a horrible sense of humanity against humanity, redeemed by the gleam of Lara and Marija's genuine love."—Library Journal

    "A searing, powerful work of fiction...fluid and immersive. Radulescu's imagery is evocative, but the real triumph here is her characters...A fierce and beautiful novel that is in many ways an immigrant story, a war story and a love story all at once, it is one of the most unique and well-crafted of its kind."—BookReporter

    "A passionate novel of fortitude and friendship . . . With a poetic intelligence and an extraordinary sense of language and history, Radulescu has given us a mesmerizing work, a tribute to the human spirit and its resilience. I loved the novel and did not want it to end."—Marjorie Agosin, award-winning author of I Lived on Butterfly Hill

    "COUNTRY OF RED AZALEAS testifies to the resilience of women's friendships in the aftermath of one of the late twentieth-century's most horrific conflicts. Well-developed, complex characters, an opulent style, ironic humor, an exotic background brought to life on the page, all contribute to a moving, spellbinding tale of love and survival."—Linda Rodriguez, author of Every Hidden Fear and finalist for the International Latino Book Award

    Library Journal
    03/15/2016
    At once the story of an intense female friendship, an immigrant's hard adjustment to America, and the particular horrors of the recent Balkan wars, Radulescu's latest (after Black Sea Twilight) packs a lot into a swift, emotionally wrought chronicle. Its narrator, Lara, named after the heroine in Doctor Zhivago (the movie, not Boris Pasternak's novel), is immediately drawn to feisty, beautiful Marija when she moves from Sarajevo to Belgrade and becomes Lara's classmate. They are inseparable through college, fiercely engaging in politics together and even sharing a boyfriend. But in the early 1990s, with the fall of communism, Serbian Lara meets an enterprising young American named Mark and leaves for America as his wife, while Bosnian Marija returns to Sarajevo and defiantly helps run a newspaper during the city's terrible bombardment. As Lara struggles with life in America and her increasingly distant marriage, she is desperate to find out what has happened to Marija. Then, in the novel's most significant passages, she decides to go find her friend. VERDICT Some readers will find Lara's voice too gushy at first, but the novel wallops us with a horrible sense of humanity against humanity, redeemed by the gleam of Lara and Marija's genuine love.—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
    Kirkus Reviews
    2016-01-10
    An intense friendship between two women, one Serbian and one Bosnian, withstands the war in Serbia and its aftermath. Radulescu delivers a third novel (Black Sea Twilight, 2011, etc.) spanning the end of communism to the beginnings of the Iraq War. At age 7, Lara falls in love with her classmate Marija, who moved from Sarajevo to Belgrade. Their friendship is charmed; they devour old Hollywood movies, honey almond sweets, and stolen fruit. Marija's Sarajevo is depicted as fantastically luscious, with "creamy white mosques" like "wedding cakes" and the scents of "red azaleas, honey, coffee, and apricots" everywhere. The story glosses over their time as radical students at the University of Belgrade, sharing an effeminate lover, until the threat of war becomes apparent and Lara meets Mark, an American scholar she quickly marries. She moves to Washington, D.C., while Marija returns to Sarajevo to work as a journalist. Lara bristles at being exoticized by Mark's colleagues while she herself exoticizes the Tunisian professor she eventually takes as a lover while at an academic conference in France. Here, the language becomes overwrought: "The colors of Provence burned desires into my soul, and its sharp winds swept over me with inebriating flutters." Because a long time period is covered in relatively few pages, the middle of the narrative, concerning Lara's marriage and affair, often feels thin and distant—plot points rushed through in order to return to the novel's true subject. The story deepens when Lara plunges into a dangerous search for Marija while struggling with her identity as a Serbian and a woman who escaped, rather than confronted, the war. At turns undercooked and syrupy, the novel's depiction of Lara and Marija's bond is nevertheless a moving portrait of humanity's best overcoming humanity's worst.

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