Lucky Breaks
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Powerful, off-beat stories about women living in the shadow of the now-frozen, now-thawing war in Ukraine
Out of the impoverished coal regions of Ukraine known as the Donbass, where Russian secret military intervention coexists with banditry and insurgency, the women of Yevgenia Belorusets’s captivating collection of stories emerge from the ruins of a war, still being waged on and off, ever since the 2014 Revolution of Dignity. Through a series of unexpected encounters, we are pulled into the ordinary lives of these anonymous women: a florist, a cosmetologist, card players, readers of horoscopes, the unemployed, and a witch who catches newborns with a mitt. One refugee tries unsuccessfully to leave her broken umbrella behind as if it were a sick relative; a private caregiver in a disputed zone saves her elderly charge from the angel of death; a woman sits down on International Women’s Day and can no longer stand up; a soldier decides to marry war. Belorusets threads these tales of ebullient survival with a mix of humor, verisimilitude, the undramatic, and a profound Gogolian irony. She also weaves in twenty-three photographs that, in lyrical and historical counterpoint, form their own remarkable visual narrative.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Belorusets, a documentary photographer and activist, captures the extraordinary lives of ordinary Ukrainian women in her arresting fiction debut, a story collection. The brief entries survey lives upended by the political and military turmoil over the past two decades: "that's the kind of country we have, okay? The unprotected kind," recounts the eponymous narrator of the excellent "Lena in Danger," about a woman who leaves Ukraine for Germany in the 2000s. Some have a magical or fantastical element, such as "The Woman Who Caught Babies into a Mitt," in which a powerful witch places curses on whole buildings. As the war in the Donetsk region begins in 2014, many of the women disappear—in "The Florist," a woman spends all her time in her flower shop ("it was only inside her store," the narrator says of her, "that she knew how to exist"), until she and the shop disappear. In "A Woman at the Cosmetologist's," another woman finds comfort visiting her cosmetologist, who gives massages and fulfills the role of a therapist. As suicide rates increase, the characters' despair becomes palpable in a series of standout stories, namely "The Stars" and "The Crash." Two of Belorusets's photo series supplement her writing, but her words speak for themselves. The combination makes for a powerful exercise.