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Natasha and Other Stories

Because who wins if a Jew doesn’t go to synagogue?
I’ll tell you who:  Hitler
.” — p. 133

This collection of stories by David Bezmozgis is about a Latvian Jewish family who emigrate to Toronto, Canada.  It was a NYT Notable Book in 2004.

Mark is the only child of Roman and Bella Berman.  All seven stories in the collection feature Mark in his growing up years.  First, I’ll give a brief synopsis of each story and then my thoughts on the collection as a whole.

  • “Tapka” — It’s 1980 and Mark has been in Canada for 3 weeks.  He’s in the first grade and hangs out with his cousin Jana.  Some elderly neighbors have a dog that they idolize, and they begin to trust Mark and Jana to take care of it.
  • “Roman Berman, Massage Therapist”  – Mark’s father works at a chocolate factory but is also studying to become qualified as a massage therapist. He hopes an important doctor in the neighborhood will be a source for referrals.
  • “The Second Strongest Man” — Sergei, a very important person from the Bermans’ past, comes to Canada for a wrestling tournament.
  • “An Animal to the Memory” — Mark begins to have trouble with his classmates and the principal, particularly on Holocaust Day.
  • “Natasha” — Mark and Natasha, the daughter of his uncle’s wife, become close friends.
  • “Choynski” — Mark deals with the deaths of two people who are close to him.
  • “Minyan” — Mark’s grandfather looks for a place to live.

This is one of the best short story collections I’ve read.  All seven stories were unique, but they all fit together nicely to explore Mark’s experiences.  Although I thought all of the stories were extremely good, I thought “The Second Strongest Man” and “An Animal to the Memory” were the strongest.  If an author can make me interested in a story about wrestling, he is very good indeed. I could really feel the menace, the frustration, and the envy of the characters come through the pages.  And in “An Animal to the Memory,” the author’s depiction of Mark’s turmoil as he comes to terms with his Jewish heritage was very well done.

Highly recommended, especially for those with an interest in Jewish, Soviet/Russian, or Canadian literature.

2004, 147 pp.
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Sofia Petrovna

This slim book by Lydia Chukovskaya is a must read if you’re interested in Russian/Soviet history. It reminded me a bit of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, except that instead of the prisoner’s point of view, we get the view of the mothers and wives of the falsely imprisoned.

At the beginning of the book, Sofia is happily working as the supervising typist for a government publishing house.  Her son Kolya is deeply committed to the Soviet party and is studying engineering.  Then everything slowly goes downhill and ‘The Great Purge‘ begins.  People start disappearing.  Masses of people.  Multitudes of women  stand in line each day in front of government offices to determine the fate of their loved ones.  All are convinced it is only a big mistake, but then they themselves are deported.

This book was actually written during the time of the purges (1937-1938), but it was hidden for several years for obvious reasons and then almost published in the Soviet Union in the early sixties.  Political change occurred again, and it wasn’t published in Chukovskaya’s home country, but it was published in France and in the United States.  The book was finally published in the Soviet Union in 1988.

I almost never read forewords, author’s notes, or afterwords, but I did in this case because I was fascinated by the author’s own struggle to get the book published.  As I said, a must read for Russian history enthusiasts.

“There’s only one thing I want, just one thing I’m waiting for: to see my book published in the Soviet Union.  In my own country.  In Sofia Petrovna’s country.  I have been waiting patiently for thirty-four years.

There is but one tribunal to which I wish to offer my novella:  that of my countrymen, young and old, particularly the old, those who lived through the same thing which befell me and that woman so different from me whom I chose as the heroine of my narrative — Sofia Petrovna, one of thousands I saw all about me.

1967 for the English translation, 120 pp.
Rating: 5/5

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