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Saturday, April 23, 2022

Vladimir Sorokin profile

      

“Aches to read this. I have grown up on versions of this story — they have molded who I am today. You bring much of it back — and with great skill and power. May this story reach many, many.” — The Smoking Poet

   Cold River: A Survivor’s Story by Jozef Imrich



Long novels offer pleasures that come from having traveled with a character over time. Can gimmicks reproduce that in shorter books? Long Cold War and Peace  

Vladimir Putin's rumoured lover has reappeared with a 'new look' in Moscow following rumours she was hiding in a private chalet in Switzerland or a Siberian nuclear bunker.
Vladimir Putin's 'lover', 38, reappears with a 'new look' in Moscow amid rumours she was hiding in a Swiss chalet or Siberian nuclear bunker


   Magnesia Litera 


       Magnesia Litera is the leading Czech literary prize, and they've now announced this year's prizes, with Pavel Klusák's Gott: Československý příběh ('Gott: A Czechoslovak Story'; the 'Gott' of the title is singer Karel Gott) taking the top prize, book of the year; see also the Host publicity page
       See also Ian Willoughby's Q & A with Klusák at Radio Prague International, Klusák’s Karel Gott: A Czechoslovak Story wins Magnesia Litera
       Destrukce, by Stanislav Biler, was named best novel; see also the Druhé město publicity page. The best translation award went to the Czech translation of Jacek Dukaj's Lód; see also the Culture.pl information page


Vladimir Sorokin Says Russian Writers Must Fight Back Against Totalitarianism

Sorokin: "A Russian writer has two options: Either you are afraid, or you write. ... I write." - The New York Times


   Vladimir Sorokin profile 


       In The New York Times Alexandra Alter profiles Russian author Vladimir Sorokin, in He Envisioned a Nightmarish, Dystopian Russia. Now He Fears Living in One
       Apparently, there are eight forthcoming translations of his work, on top of the titles already available; I look forward to getting to as many of these as possible. 
       Three of his books are already under review at the complete review -- The BlizzardDay of the Oprichnik, and Ice -- but of the works I've read, The Queue is still the stand-out. 


       Stiliana Milkova Q & A 

       Stiliana Milkova recently published a monograph on Elena Ferrante as World Literature -- see the Bloomsbury publicity page -- and at The Smart Set Brianna Di Monda talks to her: "about Elena Ferrante, acts of translation, and leaky bodies", in Elena Ferrante and Feminine Creativity


       Q & A: Marjorie Perloff 

       At Tablet Jeremy Sigler has a lengthy Q & A with Marjorie Perloff, with much of the discussion about Wittgenstein, as her translation of Ludwig Wittgenstein's Private Notebooks 1914-16 is just out. 
       I haven't seen Ludwig Wittgenstein's Private Notebooks 1914-16 yet, but I do hope to eventually; meanwhile see the Liveright publicity page, or get your copy at Amazon.comBookshop.org or Amazon.co.uk





       Q & A: Parul Sehgal 

       At The Oxonian Review Zachary Fine has another Q & A in their "series of interviews with contemporary critics about criticism", An Interview with Parul Sehgal


      Hisham Bustani Q & A 

       At the Middle East Research and Information Project Curtis Ryan has a Q & A with the The Perception of Meaning-author, in Not Lost in Translation -- An Interview with Jordanian Author and Activist Hisham Bustani



       Thane Gustafson Q & A 

       I recently reviewed Thane Gustafson's KlimatRussia in the Age of Climate Change, and at The Atlantic Tom Nichols now has a Q & A with him on Putin's Blunder and Europe's Gamble