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The Wife Who Wasn't: A Novel par Alta Ifland
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The Wife Who Wasn't: A Novel (édition 2021)

par Alta Ifland (Auteur)

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An exhilaratingly comical, crosscultural debut novel,The Wife Who Wasn't brings together an eccentric community from the hills of Santa Barbara, California, and a family of Russians from ChiÈ(tm)inÄfu, the capital of Moldova. It starts in the late 1990s, after the fall of communism, and has at its center the mail-order marriage between a California man (Sammy) and a Russian woman (Tania) who comes to America, which engenders a series of hilarious cultural misunderstandings. The novel's four parts take place alternately in California and Moldova, and comprise short chapters whose point of view moves seamlessly between that of the omniscient narrator and that of various characters. Delivered in arresting prose, both realities--late 90s, bohemian/hipster California and postcommunist Moldova--thus come together from opposite points of view. Above all, this novel is a comedy of manners that depicts the cultural (and personality) clash between Tania and Sammy, Anna (Sammy's teenage daughter) and Irina, and Bill (Sammy's neighbor) and Serioja (Tania's brother). It is also a comedy of errors in the tradition of playful, multiple love triangles. The novel reaches a shocking climax involving a stolen Egon Schiele painting and alluding to the real history of East Mountain Drive, whose bohemian community was destroyed in the 2008"Tea Fire." A literary tour de force and a rollicking satire of both suburban America and urban Eastern Europe, is a must for fans of Gary Schteyngart (The Russian Debutante's Handbook), Keith Gessen (A Terrible Country), Ludmila Ulitskaya (), and Lara Vapnyar (Divide Me By Zero).… (plus d'informations)
Membre:Ifland
Titre:The Wife Who Wasn't: A Novel
Auteurs:Alta Ifland (Auteur)
Info:New Europe Books (2021), 320 pages
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Mots-clés:Romanian, Moldovan, Russian, post-Communist, Soviet, California, satire, humor, literary fiction, novel

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The Wife Who Wasn't: A Novel par Alta Ifland

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The Wife Who Wasn’t brings together an eccentric community from the hills of Santa Barbara, California, and a family of unbound Russians from Chisinau/Kishinev, the capital of Moldova. The novel starts in the late nineties, after the fall of Communism, and has at its center the “arranged” (via a matrimonial agency) marriage between a California man (Sammy) and a Russian woman (Tania) who comes to America and engenders a series of hilarious cultural misunderstandings.

The novel’s four parts take place alternately in California and Moldova, and are written in short chapters whose point of view moves between the Moldovans and the Californians (the Moldovans are seen from the perspective of the Americans, and vice-versa). This shift allows the reader to perceive both realities—late 90s California and Moldova—from opposite points of view.
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An exhilaratingly comical, crosscultural debut novel,The Wife Who Wasn't brings together an eccentric community from the hills of Santa Barbara, California, and a family of Russians from ChiÈ(tm)inÄfu, the capital of Moldova. It starts in the late 1990s, after the fall of communism, and has at its center the mail-order marriage between a California man (Sammy) and a Russian woman (Tania) who comes to America, which engenders a series of hilarious cultural misunderstandings. The novel's four parts take place alternately in California and Moldova, and comprise short chapters whose point of view moves seamlessly between that of the omniscient narrator and that of various characters. Delivered in arresting prose, both realities--late 90s, bohemian/hipster California and postcommunist Moldova--thus come together from opposite points of view. Above all, this novel is a comedy of manners that depicts the cultural (and personality) clash between Tania and Sammy, Anna (Sammy's teenage daughter) and Irina, and Bill (Sammy's neighbor) and Serioja (Tania's brother). It is also a comedy of errors in the tradition of playful, multiple love triangles. The novel reaches a shocking climax involving a stolen Egon Schiele painting and alluding to the real history of East Mountain Drive, whose bohemian community was destroyed in the 2008"Tea Fire." A literary tour de force and a rollicking satire of both suburban America and urban Eastern Europe, is a must for fans of Gary Schteyngart (The Russian Debutante's Handbook), Keith Gessen (A Terrible Country), Ludmila Ulitskaya (), and Lara Vapnyar (Divide Me By Zero).

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Alta Ifland est un auteur LibraryThing, c'est-à-dire un auteur qui catalogue sa bibliothèque personnelle sur LibraryThing.

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Alta Ifland a discuté avec les utilisateurs de LibraryThing du Oct 20, 2009 au Oct 30, 2009. Lire la discussion.

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