Author Archives: Melissa Beck

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About Melissa Beck

My reading choices are rather eclectic. I enjoy reading a wide range of books especially classics, literature in translation, history, philosophy, travel writing and poetry. I especially like to support small, literary presses.

Review: Calligraphy Lesson-Collected Stories by Mikhail Shishkin

I received an advanced review copy of this title from Deep Vellum Publishing.  This is the first English-language collection of short stories by Russia’s greatest contemporary author, Mikhail Shishkin, the only author to win all three of Russia’s most prestigious literary awards.

My Review:

Calligraphy LessonThe theme that pervades all of these stories is the tragic oppression and enslavement of Russia’s people by its Soviet government.  Shishkin offers stories about himself and various members of his family and the devastating impact of Soviet rule had on their lives for generations.

My favorite story in the collection is the first one entitled “The Half-Belt Overcoat” in which the author describes the hardships of his mother who serves as a school headmistress.  On the one hand she is expected to inculcate the students into the ideals of the Soviet, communist state.  On the other hand she must teach the children to think yet not express any of their ideas that would defy the communist rulers.

When the author is a teenager he has an argument with his mother over a girl with whom he has fallen in love.  He mother does not approve so he doesn’t speak to his mother for over a year.  Later in life when his mother is dying of cancer, he feels deep regret for punishing her with silence.  But he can never find the words to express his sorrow and his appreciation for her struggle before she dies

The story “Of Saucepans and Star Showers,” presents us with the struggles of the author’s father as they relate to living under the Soviet regime.  His father was in the Russian navy and served on a submarine.  He is proud of his service to his country and dons his uniform every year to show his national pride.  But when the Soviet government starts doling out food rations that come from Germany, his father begins to think that his sacrifices to defeat the enemy during World War II were all in vain.  He lives out the rest of his sad, pathetic days alone and drowning his sorrows in bottles of vodka.

The final story that must be mentioned is entitled “The Bell Tower of San Marco.”  Lydia is a Russian who is studying in Zurich to become a doctor.  While in medical school she meets, falls in love with and marries a Swiss doctor named Fritz.  Lydia’s greatest ambition in life is to take a position as a doctor in the poorest parts of Russia and help the masses realize that they are being enslaved by the tsarist regime.  Lydia is a fervent socialist and wants to create an uprising of the masses which, she believes, will result in a complete revolution.

Lydia moves back to Russia and leaves Fritz in Zurich to practice medicine.  Their married life consists mainly of letters and when they are together they seem unhappy and dissatisfied.  Lydia eventually realizes that the poor do not want a revolution and the socialist values which she represents are meaningless to them.  At 40 she becomes an old, depressed, woman who feels that her entire life has been wasted on useless ideals.  Perhaps when the bell tower of the famous church of San Marco collapsed during their honeymoon to Venice, she should have taken that as a sign or an omen of the tragedy that was to become her life.

I highly recommend CALLIGRAHPY LESSONS for the beautiful language, moving stories and the emotional characters.  This collection of short stories has made me want to delve into Shishkin’s longer works.

About The Author:

M ShishkinMikhail Shishkin was born in Moscow in 1961. He won the 2000 Booker Prize for his The Taking of Izmail and the 2005 National Bestseller Prize and the 2006 National “Big Book” Prize for his Maidenhair (Open Letter, 2012). He lives in Switzerland.

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Filed under Literature in Translation, Russian Literature, Short Stories

Review: Alexandrian Summer by Yitzhak Gormezano Goren

I received an advanced review copy of this title from New Vessel Press.  They have quickly become one of my favorite small presses, especially for translated fiction.  Published in Hebrew in 1978, Alexandrian Summer appears now in translation for the first time.  This edition has been translated by Yardenne Greenspan.  Please visit the publisher’s website to read about all of their wonderful titles: www.newvesselpress.com .

My Review:
Alexandrian SummerThis story takes place over the course of the summer of 1951 as Robby, a ten-year-old boy and his Jewish family share a flat in Alexandria with another Jewish family.  Egypt is an interesting place at the time as people from all over Europe, the Middle East and Africa converge on this country.  Jews, Muslims and Christians all live together side by side peaceably, but in 1951 this pleasant coexistence starts to show some cracks.

The grown-ups in the book are seen through the eyes of Robby who sometimes doesn’t quite understand what is going on with the adults.  His grandmother is constantly gossiping with her friends as they play cards and his older sister goes on dates with different men but doesn’t want to seem to settle down and get married.  At one point Robby and his friend Victor begin to explore their own sexuality and burgeoning bodies.  This part might be disturbing to some readers, but it brings up an important issue about how children learn about sex, attraction and how their bodies function.

The Hamdi-Ali family, who live in Cairo during the rest of the year, move in with Robby’s family for the summer.  The language of the book perfectly captures the atmosphere of Alexandria with its cool breezes from the ocean that  stave off the heat of the Libyan desert.  The residents of this seaside town are also captivated by the horse races that take place during this hot and dusty season.  David Hamdi-Ali is a famous jockey whose most important race during the summer is against an Arabian Muslim.

The horserace between David and the Arab becomes a metaphor for the tension that is steadily growing between Muslims and Jews in Egypt at this time.  David’s father, Joseph, is also a symbol of this religious tension as he feels guilty for abandoning Islam and converting to Judaism in order to be able to marry his Jewish wife.  When Joseph’s son loses to the Muslim, he views this as Allah’s punishment because Joseph turned his back on his faith because of his love for a woman.

This is a rather brief novel, but there are so many elements within it to think about and digest.  The author has brilliantly created an interesting cast of characters that represent all stages of life, from childhood to old age, and the very human struggles that we encounter during each of these stages.  ALEXANDRIAN SUMMER is sensual, funny, descriptive and a fabulous story that I highly recommend.

About The Author:
Y GorenYitzhak Gormezano Goren was born in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1941 and immigrated to Israel as a child. A playwright and a novelist, Gormezano Goren has an MFA in theater directing from Brooklyn College. He cofounded the Kedem Stage Theater in Tel Aviv in 1982 and directed it for 30 years. Gormezano Goren is a winner of the Ramat Gan Prize for Literature and received the Israeli Prime Minister’s Prize for Literature in 2001.

 

 

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Filed under Classics, Literary Fiction, Literature in Translation

Review: The Sound of the Sundial by Hana Andronikova

I received a review copy of this title from the publisher. The Sound of the Sundial won the Czech Republic’s prestigious Magnesia Litera Award in the category of Best New Discovery, just a few years before its author died of cancer at the age of 44. It is making its world premiere appearance in English here from Plamen Press.

My Review:
Sound of the SundialThis is the beautiful yet devastating story of a Czech family that is torn apart by the tragedies and atrocities of World War II.  Rachael and Thomas are deeply in love and are the type of couple who perfectly compliment each other:  Rachael has a fiery temper and is very passionate and impulsive while Thomas is calm, thoughtful and contemplative.  Their relationship is traced in the book from its very beginning where they meet in Zlin when Rachael’s devoutly Jewish parents forbid her to have a relationship with Thomas who is not Jewish.

Rachael, of course, defines her parents and marries Thomas despite their objections.  Thomas is a builder for a prominent shoe manufacturer in Czechoslovakia and they send him to India in order to plan a new factory that will be set up in Calcutta.  Quite a bit of the story involves flashbacks to Thomas and Rachel’s time in India where they are also raising their young son Daniel.  The language of the book perfectly captures the sensual, beautiful and almost savage landscape of Calcutta.

Rachael and Thomas return to Czechoslovakia when Rachael’s mother is dying.  Unfortunately, this corresponds with the German invasion of Eastern Europe and the persecution of Jews.  Thomas desperately tries to get his family out of the country before his wife is sent to the Ghetto but he doesn’t manage to do this before his wife is torn from their family.  The scenes of Rachael’s removal and separation from her husband and son are heartbreaking.  Eventually Rachael is sent to Auschwitz where her emotional endurance among deplorable circumstances is beyond description.  Thomas and Daniel long to hear word about her and fight their own madness as they wonder whether or not they will ever see her again.

This is truly a beautiful story about a family and their hardships that echo through the generations.  Even though Daniel is an old man with his own grandchild the stories about his mother and father still bring him to tears.  I highly recommend THE SOUND OF THE SUNDIAL for those who enjoy historical fiction set during World War II as well as an engrossing story.

About The Author:
H. AndronkinovaHana Andronikova was a widely-published Czech writer. She received the Magnesia Litera Award in 2002 for her first novel, Zvuk slunecnich hodin [The Sound of the Sundial] (2001) and went on to author the short story collection Srdce na udici [Heart on a Hook] (2002). Her fiction has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies in Europe and the U.S., including World Literature Today

 

 

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Review: A Game of Hide and Seek by Elizabeth Taylor

I bought this title a few months back when the New York Review of Books had a fantastic winter sale.  Please visit their website for a full list of their amazing titles: http://www.nybooks.com/books/imprints/classics/

My Review:
A Game of Hide and SeekHarriet and Vessey have known each other for their entire lives.  When they turn eighteen there is a physical and emotional attraction between them which neither one feels comfortable or mature enough to acknowledge.  When they babysit Vessey’s younger cousins, they play hide and seek with the children so they can be together; they are so shy and naive that they don’t take advantage of this time alone while they are hiding to reveal their true feelings.

When Vessey moves away and goes to college and eventually begins his second rate acting career, Harriet settles down with a comfortable and safe man named Charles.  But for the duration of her married life she holds Charles up to her ideal image of Vessey against which fantasy Charles could never compete.  Harriet tries to make the most of her marriage by keeping a tidy home and taking care of their daughter Betsey.  But there is a feeling of loneliness and isolation that pervades Harriet’s life.

Taylor also shows us her comedic side in this otherwise serious novel through the introduction of a group of spinster ladies with whom Harriet works at a local dress shop.  They spend their days avoiding work, gossiping, primping themselves and discussing their latest male conquests.  They give Harriet who at this point is still unmarried, the worst relationship advice.

An aspect of Taylor’s writing style in this book that is worth mentioning is her transitions both within chapters and between chapters; time shifts very abruptly in the novel which is fitting for the topics of love, marriage and how our opinions of these things change, sometimes rather drastically, as we grow older.  When Vessey reappears in Harriet’s life she is middle-aged and well-settled in her marriage.  Will she choose a life with Vessey that she has idealized for so many years or will she stay with her husband and daughter and keep her family together.

A GAME OF HIDE AND SEEK is a wonderful novel to begin with if you want to sample Elizabeth Taylor’s work.  In June I will be reading and reviewing her novel A View of the Harbour, which is another reissue from The New York Review of Books.

About The Author:
Elizabeth TaylorElizabeth Taylor (née Coles) was a popular English novelist and short story writer. Elizabeth Coles was born in Reading, Berkshire in 1912. She was educated at The Abbey School, Reading, and worked as a governess, as a tutor and as a librarian.

In 1936, she married John Micael, a businessman. She lived in Penn, Buckinghamshire, for almost all her married life.

Her first novel, At Mrs. Lippincote’s, was published in 1945 and was followed by eleven more. Her short stories were published in various magazines and collected in four volumes. She also wrote a children’s book.

Taylor’s work is mainly concerned with the nuances of “everyday” life and situations, which she writes about with dexterity. Her shrewd but affectionate portrayals of middle class and upper middle class English life won her an audience of discriminating readers, as well as loyal friends in the world of letters.

She was a friend of the novelist Ivy Compton-Burnett and of the novelist and critic Robert Liddell.

Elizabeth Taylor died at age 63 of cancer.

 

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Filed under Classics, Literary Fiction, New York Review of Books

Review: The Mapmaker’s Children by Sarah McCoy

I received an advanced review copy of this title from the publisher through TLC Book Tours.

My Review:
Mapmaker's ChildrenThis story is a dual narrative that traces the lives of two women: Sarah Brown is living in the 1860’s and her father is fighting to free slaves, and Eden Anderson is living in the 21st century and lays around wallowing in self-pity and thinking about her fertility issues.  The contrast between the characters of these two women and how they deal with hardships is extreme.  Sarah learns very early on that she cannot have children because of a high fever from dysentery, but she dedicates her life to her father’s cause of helping free slaves through the Underground Railroad.  Sarah draws maps so that these men and women who are desperate to escape their enslavement can make it to safety.  Even when Sarah’s father is hanged for his part in the Harper’s Ferry uprising, she bravely carries on the abolitionist cause at great personal risk.

Eden, on the other hand, is absorbed by anger and depression because she cannot have a child and she sadly takes her frustrations out on her husband.  When the story opens Eden is ready to give up on her marriage and move out.  The juxtaposition between the strength of Sarah and the weakness of Eden makes Eden an even more unlikeable character.  The eleven-year-old girl named Cleo who lives next door to Eden is a much more interesting and feisty character and both she and a dog named Cricket finally challenge Eden to stop feeling sorry for herself.

The two narratives gradually intersect as a secret door in the pantry of Eden’s house reveals the head of a doll.  With Cleo’s help Eden gets to the bottom of this mystery and she, predictably, learns some valuable lessons for her own life.

The strongest part of this novel is the story of Sarah Brown and her family as they fight for the abolition of slavery.  For me the story of Eden and her infertility were distracting and tiresome.  The events of the Harper’s Ferry Rebellion and the fight for freedom is such a powerful and interesting period of history and these events could stood on their own as the focus of an historical fiction novel.

I am interested to hear what other readers think: do you enjoy historical fiction novels with dual narratives in different time frames?

See what other bloggers are saying about the MAPMAKER’S CHILDREN book tour.  Click on the TLC banner below for a listing of all the stops on the tour.

About The Author:
McCoySARAH McCOY is the New York Times, USA Today, and international bestselling author of The Baker’s Daughter, a 2012 Goodreads Choice Award Best Historical Fiction nominee; the novella “The Branch of Hazel” in Grand Central; The Time It Snowed in Puerto Rico; and The Mapmaker’s Children (Crown, May 5, 2015).

Her work has been featured in Real Simple, The Millions, Your Health Monthly, Huffington Post and other publications. She has taught English writing at Old Dominion University and at the University of Texas at El Paso. She calls Virginia home but presently lives with her husband, an Army physician, and their dog, Gilly, in El Paso, Texas. Sarah enjoys connecting with her readers on Twitter at @SarahMMcCoy, on her Facebook Fan Page or via her website, http://www.sarahmccoy.com.

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Filed under Historical Fiction