Mikhail Shishkin is one of Russia's most prominent and respected
contemporary writers. When Maidenhair was published in 2005, it was
awarded both the National Bestseller Prize and the Big Book
Prize.
Marian Schwartz is a prize-winning translator of Russian. The
winner of a Translation Fellowship from the National Endowment for
the Arts and the Heldt Translation Prize, Schwartz has translated
classic literary works by Nina Berberova, Yuri Olesha, and Mikhail
Bulgakov.
"The first reading of Maidenhair is like tipping the pieces of a
1000-piece jigsaw out of the box and turning them all picture-side
up . . ."Slightly Booklist
"[Shishkin] takes Nabokov's remarkable linguistic flexibility but
none of his arrogance; like Chekhov, he looks on humanity with
humor and compassion. Shishkin's Baroque turns of phrases seem
written out of necessity and joy rather than pretention; he
respects his readers, he delights in language, and he does not need
to show off."Madeleine LaRue, The Quarterly Conversation
"Shishkins work has been described as 'refined neo-modernism.' His
dense, lyrical prose suggests the influence of 'Ulysses', but
Shishkin objects that 'Joyce doesn't love his heroes'; in
Maidenhair love is the crucial answer to most of the hundreds of
questions."Pheobe Taplin, Russia Beyond The Headlines
"In short, Maidenhair is the best post-Soviet Russian novel I have
read. Simply put, it is true literature, a phenomenon we encounter
too rarely in any language."Daniel Kalder, The Dallas Morning
News
"Shishkin is fascinated by the concept of the narratives we create
for ourselves, whether entirely imagined, or based on what we think
is memory and fact. Yet he doesn't ram that idea down readers'
throats; he merely offers it here, in many variations, but also
allows the stories themselves to be spun out. It makes for an
unusual novelunusual in the sense that it is unlike what one has
encountered before, and unlike what one has come to expect. It
expands, in a small but significant way, our understanding of what
the novel can be and doquite a remarkable achievement."Michael
Orthofer, Complete Review
"Maidenhair is likely a work of genius. . . . If Shishkin is right
about the power of words to resurrect the dead, Maidenhair has all
but secured his immortality."Christopher Tauchen, Words Without
Borders
"Most of the critics agree that 2005 will go down in the history of
Russian literature as the year when Maidenhair, the new novel by
Mikhail Shishkin, was published."Literaturnaya Rossia
"Maidenhair is a kind of book they give the Nobel prize for. The
novel is majestic."Nezavisimaya Gazeta
Ask a Question About this Product More... |