Absurdistan
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- 9,99 €
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- 9,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Mischa Vainberg ist 30, 147 Kilo schwer und auf der Suche nach der Liebe. Seine Mutter starb, als er noch klein war. Als 18-Jähriger schickte ihn sein Vater zum Studium und zur Beschneidung nach Amerika. Doch just als Mischa ihn in St. Petersburg besuchen will, wird der alte Vainberg erschossen. Für Mischa beginnt eine Irrfahrt: Zurück in die USA kann er nicht, da ihm die Einreise verweigert wird. Also sucht er sein Heil in der Flucht. Ein Bekannter ist belgischer Diplomat in Absurdistan, vielleicht verschafft der ihm die nötigen Papiere? Aber Absurdistan wird gerade von einem Bürgerkrieg erschüttert …
Einfallsreich. Wortgewaltig. Grenzenlos.
«Gary Shteyngart ist so böse wie Borat und lustiger als Nabokov.» (Die ZEIT)
«Gary Shteyngart ist ein virtuoser Geschichtenerzähler.» (The New York Times)
«So politisch unkorrekt ist schon lange kein Romanheld mehr durchs Zeitgeschehen gerast.» (Der Spiegel)
«In dieser derb-amüsanten und überschäumend bösartigen Satire schießt der jüdische Exil-Russe Shteyngart gegen alles.» (Süddeutsche Zeitung)
«So eine umwerfende, abenteuerliche und bis zum Schluss spannende Story … ist für sich schon eine Rarität … Aber bei Shteyngart erzeugt obendrein der verschwenderische, ausgreifende Erzählstil einen echten Sog.» (Frankfurter Allgemeine)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Misha Vainberg, the rich, arrogant and very funny hero of Shteyngart's follow-up to The Russian Debutante's Handbook, compares himself early on to Prince Myshkin from Dostoyevski's The Idiot: "Like the prince, I am something of a holy fool... an innocent surrounded by schemers." Readers will more likely note his striking resemblance to John Kennedy Toole's Ignatius Reilly. A "sophisticate and a melancholic," Misha is an obese 30-year-old Russian heir to a post-Soviet fortune. After living in the Midwest and New York City for 12 years, he considers himself "an American impounded in a Russian body." But his father in St. Petersburg has killed an Oklahoma businessman and then turned up dead himself, and Misha, trying to leave Petersburg after the funeral, is denied a visa to the United States. The novel is written as his appeal, "a love letter and also a plea," to the Immigration and Naturalization Service to allow him to return to the States, which lovingly and hilariously follows Misha's attempt to secure a bogus Belgian passport in the tiny post-Soviet country of Absurdistan. Along the way, Shteyngart's graphic, slapstick satire portrays the American dream as experienced by hungry newborn democracies, and covers everything from crony capitalism to multiculturalism. It's also a love story. Misha is in love with New York City and with Rouenna Sales, his "giant multicultural swallow" from the South Bronx, despite the pain they have caused him: a botched bris performed on Misha at age 18 by New York City's Hasid-run Mitzvah Mobile, and Rouenna running off with his stateside rival (and Shteyngart's doppelganger), Jerry Shteynfarb (author of "The Russian Arriviste's Hand Job") while Misha is stuck in Russia. The ruling class of Absurdistan is in love with the corrupt American company Halliburton, which is helping the rulers in a civil war in order to defraud the U.S. government. Halliburton, in turn, is in love with Absurdistan for the money it plans to make rebuilding Absurdistan's "inferstructure" and for the plentiful hookers who spend their nights and days by hotel pools looking for "Golly Burton" employees to service. And everyone is in love with America or at least its money. Everything in Shteyngart's frustrated world characters, countries, landscapes strives for U.S.-style culture and prosperity, a quest that gives shape to the melancholy and hysteria of Shteyngart's Russia. Extending allegorical tentacles back to the Cold War and forward to the War on Terror, Shteyngart piles on plots, characters and flashbacks without losing any of the novel's madcap momentum, and the novel builds to a frantic pitch before coming to a breathless halt on the day before 9/11. The result is a sendup of American values abroad and a complex, sympathetic protagonist worthy of comparison to America's enduring literary heroes. (On sale May 2)