The Patriots
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- 15,99 €
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- 15,99 €
Publisher Description
'A sweeping, colourful read' Mail on Sunday
Lose yourself in the irresistable story of one woman's journey through 20th-century Russia.
Growing up in 1930s Brooklyn, Florence Fein will do anything to escape the confining values of her family and her city, and create a life of meaning and consequence. When a new job and a love affair lead her to Moscow, she doesn't think twice about abandoning America - only to discover, years later, that America has abandoned her.
Now, as her son Julian travels back to Moscow - entrusted to stitch together a murky transcontinental oil deal - he must dig into Florence's past to discover who his mother really was and what she became. He must also persuade his own son, Lenny, to abandon his risky quest for prosperity in the cut-throat Russian marketplace. As he traces a thread from Depression-era America, through the collective housing and work camps of Stalin's USSR, to the glittering, oil-rich world of New Russia, Julian finally begins to understand the role he has played - as a father, and as a son.
Epic in sweep and intimate in detail, The Patriots is both a compelling portrait of the entangled relationship between America and Russia, and a beautifully crafted story of three generations of one family caught between the forces of history and the consequences of past choices.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Sana Krasikov’s riveting family saga isn’t simply a superbly written story, it’s also a fascinating insight into Russian history and a timely study of notions of identity. One of Granta’s Best Young American Novelists of 2017, Krasikov takes us from America’s Great Depression to 21st-century Russia as she shapes the heart-wrenching tale of U.S.–born Florence Fein, who became stuck in the USSR during the Great Purge. Through a wealth of sharply realised characters, Krasikov’s carefully constructed plotlines slowly converge into one immensely moving whole.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Three generations of a Russian-American Jewish family are caught in the turmoil of the Soviet Union and its aftermath in Krasikov's capacious, exhausting novel. In 1933, the headstrong young Brooklynite Florence Fein meets Soviet engineer Sergey Sokolov through her work at Amtorg, the unofficial Soviet trade mission in the U.S. After a summer affair, she follows Sergey back to the Old World, dreaming of a more equitable society; the reality she finds in the city of Magnitogorsk looks more like "appalling sanitation... endless hunger... bullying superiors." Journeying on to Moscow, she begins to make a new life with a new love a fellow expatriate lured by the Soviet promise of the future but that life is soon imperiled by Stalin's purges, as arrests, interrogations, and executions terrorize the population. By shifting frequently among narrators and time periods, Krasikov suggests that the perils of Russian life are perennial; in 2008, Florence's adult son, Julian, now living in the U.S. and working for an oil company, returns to Moscow and finds himself faced not only with pervasive corruption, but with the possibility that his own son, Lenny, may be endangered by the unsavory business deal he's been tasked to execute. Krasikov aims for a cubist take on the Soviet century, touching on orphanages, labor camps, universities, and the theater. The plot lags and the prose is awkward, but readers may discover some interesting details of the time and place through the extensive research Krasikov implements into the story.