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The Italian Lessons

  • Marina Stepnova
  • Categories:Romance
  • Language:Russian(Translation Services Available)
  • Publication date:
  • Pages:384
  • Retail Price:(Unknown)
  • Size:130mm×200mm
  • Page Views:306
  • Words:(Unknown)
  • Star Ratings:
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Feature

★Rights sold: Netherlands, Germany, France, Hungary, Lithuania, Arabic, Macedonia, Serbia, Estonia, Latvia, Albania, Slovakia, India, Mongolia!
★Marina Stepnova, the national bestselling author of the Women of Lazarus, brilliantly weaves together a tragic love story and a Bildungsroman, resulting in a trenchant novel about a mad (and maddening) love, personal freedom, and the price one must pay for it.

Description

  We follow Ivan Ogaryov’s life, from his bleak lovestarved childhood, through the army and a tragic deadly accident, to his career as a therapist with a large clientele at a Moscow private clinic. e status quo had always been repellent to Ogaryov, yet at 42 years of age he is living a superfi cial, formulaic, predictable life. He has his work in the clinic, joyless marriage and sex, Sunday visits to his wife’s parents, and Saturday shopping in a supermarket mall.

  One day is all it takes for this life to collapse into ruins – the day that Ogaryov meets Malya (24), a girl who is truly exceptional. Their mad love aff air sweeps Ogaryov out of his dreary existence into
a heady “Master and Margarita” world, where the only things that matter are verse, food, love and…Italy. Ogaryov gives up his long-standing marriage, leaving his deeply loving wife crushed; he quits his job (a stab in the back of his friend, the clinic ’s owner). He frequently travels outside “the systematically alien, joyless“ country, relishing his new-found happiness. He is determined to protect their life together at any cost – but Malya chooses differently.

  Told in a brisk manner, through shifting, masterfully paced sentences, the novel is rich in metaphor, and in both hidden and explicit quotes and allusions to Russia’s 20th century poetry and prose – from Vladimir Nabokov through Boris Pasternak to George Adamovich. In her third published novel, Marina Stepnova’s by now mature voice rings withexceptional strength and clarity. It has struck a chord with a wide readership; the first printing of 7,000 copies was sold out two weeks after its release. It remained firmly in the top five of the bestseller lists of Moscow’s major bookstores for an entire month after publication, and drew a lively response from the national critical establishment.

  Marina Stepnova in an interview for Vedomosti: “One always pays for freedom, and in Russia (and not only in the Soviet era) the price has always been exceptionally high. On the other hand, freedom is the only thing worth paying this price for. Ogaryov loses everything he has: his country, his job, the woman he loves and who loves him, his social status. But in return he achieves something heretofore unimaginable – at long last he can live the way he had always dreamed about but never dared attempt, because he was always dogged by that very social status, with its family expectations, responsibilities, debts . . . Ordinary life – alien and importunate.”

Author

Marina Stepnova

  Marina Stepnova was born in 1971 in the small town of Efremov, in the Tula region. Marina was raised in Moscow, where she now lives. She graduated from the Gorky Literary Institute and did postgraduate studies at the Institute of World Literature. Stepnova’s translation from Romanian of the play Nameless Star by Mihail Sebastian has been staged by numerous theaters throughout Russia. Marina Stepnova is the author of three novels, including a Big Book Award winning and nationally bestselling novel, the Women of Lazarus and the novel the Surgeon, which won her the nomination for the National Bestseller Prize and broad critical acclaim. Stepnova works as a scriptwriter and contributes to a number of national newspapers.

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