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55+ Works 1,725 Members 60 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: David Shankbone

Works by Lyudmila Petrushevskaya

The Time: Night (1992) 172 copies
Immortal love (1988) 45 copies
Through the Wall (2011) 42 copies
Cinzano: Eleven Plays (1991) 11 copies
Favole dopo le favole (1992) 6 copies
Netten en strikken (1989) 4 copies
Klarissan tarina (1989) 4 copies
Les nouveaux Robinsons (2013) 4 copies
Fiction (Russian Edition) (1997) 2 copies
Girls' House (1998) 2 copies
Moscow Choir (2007) 1 copy
Our Circle 1 copy
Il mistero della casa (1998) 1 copy
Cinzano (2001) 1 copy
Rekvijemy 1 copy
Umodne stikkelsbær (2018) 1 copy

Associated Works

Granta 30: New Europe (1990) — Contributor — 145 copies
The Penguin Book of International Women's Stories (1996) — Contributor — 114 copies
Moscow Noir (2010) — Contributor — 64 copies
McSweeney's Issue 43 (2013) — Contributor — 48 copies
The New Soviet Fiction: Sixteen Short Stories (1989) — Contributor — 33 copies
Balancing Acts (1989) — Contributor — 25 copies
Nine of Russia’s foremost women writers (2003) — Contributor — 14 copies

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Reviews

I kind of hated this story right up until the ending which was honestly just... really fantastic and it made me cry. Petrushevskaya knows what she's doing.
½
 
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ZetaRiemann | May 3, 2024 |
Incredibly harsh to read--the author clearly conveys the madness of Soviet-era Russia but the reader needs a strong constitution to get past the ugliness.
 
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monicaberger | 6 other reviews | Jan 22, 2024 |
Eccentric Tales With A Modern Touch...........................
The New Adventures of Helen by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya is an awesome compilation of some magical tales. I have read a Russian writer for the first time. I am so impressed with her writing style. In only 7 stories, she has depicted Love, Hate, Freedom, Gender and Faith. You would not be able to put down the book as the stories are so engrossing. The cover of the book is simple and eye catching. Thanks to Edelweiss for giving me an opportunity to read it.
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Sucharita1986 | Sep 25, 2021 |
‘’She’ll wait for his long-distance call in a phone booth at the post office. For ten prepaid minutes they’ll become one soul again, as they did over the twenty-four prepaid days of their vacation. They’ll shout and cry across thousands of mils, deceived by the promise of eternal summer, seduced and abandoned.’’

Love is a weird thing. Eerie and unexpected and devastating. It comes when you least expect it, it forces you to turn your eyes inside yourself and doubt everything you had ever taken for granted. It is a blow on the head that leaves you silent and shocked. In Petrushevskaya’s extraordinary stories love flourishes within a society that has been destroyed by the Soviet nightmare.

A Murky Fate: A woman who is desperate for tenderness decides to bring home a lover who is not so keen on ‘’love’’.

The Fall: A man and a woman try to spend a few days of seaside summer romance before life gets in the way once again.

The Goddess Parka: A rather inquisitive woman pesters a young woman about women and marriage. However, little does he know that she is going to change his life. Such a tender story!

Like Penelope: An aspiring translator and her tender mother offer hospitality to an ailing elderly lady. Sometimes life can surprise you in the most beautiful and powerful ways. A story full of hope, compassion and elegant satire.

Ali-Baba: A sad story about two troubled individuals that meet at a bar, about addiction and loneliness.

Two Deities: An ‘’accidental’’ pregnancy leads to the forming of a special family. But even a seemingly happy union has its own moments of gloom…

Father and Mother: In a rare reverse of roles, a family is suffering at the hands of a woman who is neither a mother nor a wife, but a hysterical shrew prone to fits of rage and drama.

The Impulse: A rather humorous story of a liaison gone very, very bad…

Hallelujah, Family!: Two totally irresponsible, irritating people become parents and oh, the horror because they can’t stand each other. Affair after affair, the woman does justice to her family’s reputation, the man is every bit the scoundrel. How can such people bring up children?

Give Her to Me: A composer and an actress fall for each other and devise a clever plan to succeed in the theatre world. A melancholic story of love, aspirations, motherhood and dignity.

Milgrom: Two women work together to give a young girl a summer dress and an entrance to a new life. The moving story of a Polish Jewish woman who stood against life itself and won, and an eighteen-year-old girl who is about to spread her wings.

The Story of Clarissa: An uncompromising young woman falls prey to a terrible husband. Her determination wins so future pathetic husbands, beware because there is an entire army of women who refuse to listen to your nonsense.

Tamara’s Baby: An utterly absurd yet strangely melancholic story about a divorced man whose life has collapsed and the woman who decides to care for him only to find her own demons awakened.

Young Berries: This is a story of young lust, the nightmare of the communal apartments, the cruelty of children, the terror of the Soviet society.

The Adventures of Vera: The love affairs of a girl who falls in love a little too easily and always with the wrong man in a society where men are expected to ‘’hunt’’ and women should become ‘’nuns’’.

Eros’s Way: An elderly woman falls unexpectedly in love with her friend’s husband. A story about secrecy, understanding and the fragile relationships formed within the working environment. How are we to know when Eros’s arrows find their target?

A Happy Ending: A woman who has had enough of her utterly insane, utterly useless family decides to bid them adieu. But how easily can we cut old ties? How easily can we forget the ones nesting under your roof?

Moving Introduction and translation by Anne Summers.

‘’Where do you live, light-footed Tanya? In what little apartment with white curtains have you built a nest for yourself and your little ones? Quick and resourceful, you find time for everything, and fear of tomorrow never disturbs your sleep.’’

My reviews can also be found on https://theopinionatedreaderblog.wordpress.com/
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AmaliaGavea | 16 other reviews | Aug 27, 2021 |

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Works
55
Also by
11
Members
1,725
Popularity
#14,899
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
60
ISBNs
118
Languages
16
Favorited
3

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