One-Way Ticket: Stories

One-Way Ticket: Stories

No ratings yet
Nov 17, 1996 · English · Hardcover (196 pages)
Add To Shelf

Rate this book


Export Book Journal

Book Details

Format Hardcover
Pages 196
Language English
Published Nov 17, 1996
Publisher New Directions
ISBN-10 0811213412
ISBN-13 9780811213417

Description

“With a narrative style and humor that sometimes hints at Nabokov, Zinik, who left Russia in 1975, crafts amazing stories depicting the plight of emigres as they endure their solitude and try, ultimately, to create new lives and new selves. These eight stories give glimpses of the mindset and frustrations that the narrator (also named Zinovy Zinik) experiences. In “A Ticket to Spare,” a Russian Jew who travels to Kiev to see a Duke Ellington concert experiences the difficulty of seeking comfort in an unfamiliar city if only for a day. Being both Russian and Jewish, Zinik finds it hard to meet folks in Kiev; even on the anniversary of the slaughter of the Jews at Babi Yar, he’s shunned by fellow Jews engaged in a secret prayer for the victims. The stories have an archness of tone, a playfulness born of the experience of displacement and the accompanying knowledge that the world is endlessly mutable. In “A Chance Encounter,” Zinik is allowed by the Soviets to return home briefly to visit his mother’s grave, where he meets a woman he vaguely remembers. He becomes convinced she is a former girlfriend, only to find out that she is that former girlfriend’s daughter. While walking around Moscow, he enters a familiar building and is suddenly overcome by “a Soviet version of Proustian nostalgia, carried by the urine and garbage underfoot, illuminated by a naked spattered bulb as dim as memory.” Zinik captures perfectly and evocatively these memories, which reverberate within his own cork-lined room.” –– Publishers Weekly .

Genres

Humor
Add To Shelf

Rate this book


Export Book Journal