Life is an odd boot. In 2 volumes
39.99 €
In stock
The memoirs of Tamara Petkevich, along with the works of Varlam Shalamov, Euphrosyne Kersnovskaya, Evgenia Ginzburg, and many others, occupy a firm place among works that captured "a single human confluence of filth, kindness, cruelty, atrocities, and helplessness" and forever marked the coordinates of the "camp" theme on the map of 20th-century Russian literature. This young, fragile, tender, and stunningly beautiful woman experienced the full extent of the suffering that befell the innocent victims of political repression; she experienced backbreaking labor, humiliation, hunger, and cold, which turn prisoners into hunted animals. At the same time, her camp years became for the author more than just a lesson in survival in inhumane conditions.
The fate of Tamara Petkevich is worthy of a gripping novel, combining love, betrayal, jealousy, separation, friendship, encounters with amazing people, the joy of motherhood, and the pain of loss—everything that defines the exciting fullness of human life, despite the ugliness of the camp's terrible laws and the tyranny of its gods and deities.
The fate of Tamara Petkevich is worthy of a gripping novel, combining love, betrayal, jealousy, separation, friendship, encounters with amazing people, the joy of motherhood, and the pain of loss—everything that defines the exciting fullness of human life, despite the ugliness of the camp's terrible laws and the tyranny of its gods and deities.
See also:
- All books by the publisher
- All books by the author
- All books in the series Biographies, autobiographies, memoirs