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Название книги: There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbor’s Baby
Автор(ы): Ludmilla Petrushevskaya
Жанр: Мистика
Адрес книги: http://www.6lib.ru/books/There-Once-Lived-a-Woman-Who-Tried-to-Kill-Her-Neighbor_s-Baby-193618.html
Translation and introduction copyright © Keith Gessen and Anna Summers, 2009 All rights reserved“Father” and “ Two Kingdoms ” first appeared in n + 1; “The Arm,” “Incident at Sokolniki,” and “A Mother’s Farewell” in Vice; and “The Fountain House” in The New Yorker. The stories in this collection were published in Russian in Novy Mir, Ogonyok, Literaturnaya Gazeta and other periodicals.
Introduction
IN ONE OF THE SHORT MEMOIRS SHE’S WRITTEN OVER THE years, Ludmilla Petrushevskaya described a trip she took to Lithuania in 1973. Though part of the USSR, Lithuania was a troublesome republic-wealthier and more European than the rest of the empire, it was not a place a troublesome Soviet writer could go on official business. But Petrushevskaya wanted to make a pilgrimage to Thomas Mann’s summer home (on the Baltic coast) and also meet with a literary editor, who might not know-Vilnius was far from Moscow-that her w
Название книги: There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbor’s Baby
Автор(ы): Ludmilla Petrushevskaya
Жанр: Мистика
Адрес книги: http://www.6lib.ru/books/There-Once-Lived-a-Woman-Who-Tried-to-Kill-Her-Neighbor_s-Baby-193618.html
Translation and introduction copyright © Keith Gessen and Anna Summers, 2009 All rights reserved“Father” and “ Two Kingdoms ” first appeared in n + 1; “The Arm,” “Incident at Sokolniki,” and “A Mother’s Farewell” in Vice; and “The Fountain House” in The New Yorker. The stories in this collection were published in Russian in Novy Mir, Ogonyok, Literaturnaya Gazeta and other periodicals.
Introduction
IN ONE OF THE SHORT MEMOIRS SHE’S WRITTEN OVER THE years, Ludmilla Petrushevskaya described a trip she took to Lithuania in 1973. Though part of the USSR, Lithuania was a troublesome republic-wealthier and more European than the rest of the empire, it was not a place a troublesome Soviet writer could go on official business. But Petrushevskaya wanted to make a pilgrimage to Thomas Mann’s summer home (on the Baltic coast) and also meet with a literary editor, who might not know-Vilnius was far from Moscow-that her w
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