Living Pictures

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Product Details
Price
$17.95  $16.69
Publisher
New York Review of Books
Publish Date
Pages
192
Dimensions
4.9 X 7.9 X 0.6 inches | 0.45 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781681376592

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About the Author
Polina Barskova published her debut when she was only eight years old. She has lived in the United States since 1998. She studied classical philology in St. Petersburg and Slavic studies at the University of California, Berkeley, where she currently teaches. Apart from her extensive poetic work--eight volumes of poetry published since 1991--she dedicates her work as a literary scholar and editor to the poets of the siege of Leningrad.

Catherine Ciepiela is a professor of Russian at Amherst College and translator of Russian literature. She is the author of The Same Solitude, a nonfiction work about the epistolary romance between Marina Tsvetaeva and Boris Pasternak, which received the AATSEEL Prize for Best Book of Literary/Cultural Criticism in 2007 and was named an Outstanding Academic Title by Choice.

Eugene Ostashevsky is the author of the poetry collections The Life and Opinions of DJ Spinoza and Iterature, both published by Ugly Duckling Presse. He is the editor of OBERIU: An Anthology of Russian Absurdism, the first collection of writings by Vvedensky and friends in English translation. Ostashevsky teaches in the liberal studies program at New York University.
Reviews
"Set in places as diverse as San Francisco, small-town Massachusetts, Siberia, and (of course) Leningrad-Petersburg, these stories come forward as searchingly intimate and by turns tender, sensuous, macabre, absurd, ambivalent, yet always immensely and movingly vulnerable." --Anna Razumnaya, Meduza

"A category-defying amalgam of memoir, history, criticism and fiction, it is a twenty-first-century descendant of Osip Mandelstam's sui generis autobiography The Noise of Time (1925). . . . Barskova is a poetic virtuoso, and she puts her formidable gifts in service of this task." --Clare Cavanagh, TLS

"As narrator and guide. . .Barskova makes the unprocessed grief come alive. She spins it into non-narrative and non-linear poems and prose, a pastiche which mimics the very nature of traumatic memory: disassociated and halting." --Tanya Paperny, Literary Hub

"Barskova's arguments or presentations of history or biography tend to follow poetic logic, and her own biography and recollections rest atop the city's tragedy." --Sibelan Forrester, World Literature Today

"A haunting and magnificent debut fiction collection. . . . This beautiful attempt to reconstruct the lives of the lost, blended with an account of a new life built from the rubble, deserves a wide readership." --Publishers Weekly starred review

"These fractured poem-stories are composed of disjunctively arranged images, slices of memory both personal and historical, and a shadowy array of citations of varying levels of obscurity and recognizability, creating unique prose tissues that carve out a space for themselves in an ambiguous zone between critical essay, autobiography, poetry, and short fiction. What is unambiguous is their success: They are extraordinarily powerful works, at turns densely evocative and dizzyingly erudite, doing many of the best things that writing can do. Barskova, following the method of her poetry, manages by painstaking technique and sheer force of image to ponder herself considering the Siege and its survivors, drawing from life and art to represent an experience of personal trauma mediated by communication with history." --Jack Rockwell, Full-Stop

"A precise, tremendous and beautiful book." --Maria Stepanova

"Living Pictures is a highly poetic book about memories of a Soviet childhood and a reinvention in the USA, with interludes of a choir of voices from St. Petersburg. Polina Barskova's prose elegantly joins all the genres to create a new narrative form." --Christine Hamel, WDR

"A genre-bending story featuring memoir, art criticism, and the story of two lovers stuck in the Hermitage during the blockade" --Matt Janney, Calvert Journal