Kamis, 26 Januari 2012

[K591.Ebook] PDF Ebook Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

PDF Ebook Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

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Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin



Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

PDF Ebook Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

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Forty Rooms, by Olga Grushin

The internationally acclaimed author of The Dream Life of Sukhanov now returns to gift us with Forty Rooms, which outshines even that prizewinning novel.

Totally original in conception and magnificently executed, Forty Rooms is mysterious, withholding, and ultimately emotionally devastating. Olga Grushin is dealing with issues of women’s identity, of women’s choices, that no modern novel has explored so deeply.

“Forty rooms” is a conceit: it proposes that a modern woman will inhabit forty rooms in her lifetime. They form her biography, from childhood to death. For our protagonist, the much-loved child of a late marriage, the first rooms she is aware of as she nears the age of five are those that make up her family’s Moscow apartment. We follow this child as she reaches adolescence, leaves home to study in America, and slowly discovers sexual happiness and love. But her hunger for adventure and her longing to be a great poet conspire to kill the affair. She seems to have made her choice. But one day she runs into a college classmate. He is sure of his path through life, and he is protective of her. (He is also a great cook.) They drift into an affair and marriage. What follows are the decades of births and deaths, the celebrations, material accumulations, and home comforts—until one day, her children grown and gone, her husband absent, she finds herself alone except for the ghosts of her youth, who have come back to haunt and even taunt her.

Compelling and complex, Forty Rooms is also profoundly affecting, its ending shattering but true. We know that Mrs. Caldwell (for that is the only name by which we know her) has died. Was it a life well lived? Quite likely. Was it a life complete? Does such a life ever really exist? Life is, after all, full of trade-offs and choices. Who is to say her path was not well taken? It is this ambiguity that is at the heart of this provocative novel.

  • Sales Rank: #84567 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2016-02-16
  • Released on: 2016-02-16
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From Publishers Weekly
This newest work from Grushin, winner of the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award, is an enchanted meditation on poetry and life in which a child of the Moscow intelligentsia rejects a “small life consumed by happiness” in America and a life driven by “the divine standards of art.” But her path veers wildly in the New World, when she is seduced by and marries a successful young businessman whose “capable presence” she finds relaxing. The narrative then switches from the first to third person, and we witness the choices and conflicts for the young poet, known to readers only by her married name, Mrs. Paul Caldwell, as she has children and finds material comfort. “Perhaps, she thought, if you lived in a place like this, you would get to live longer too, and you would then be more willing to forgive yourself any mistakes, any spiteful wishes any wrong turns along the way. You would have more time to fix everything.” Grushin best captures the nagging regrets of her tortured artist in a magically lyrical pair of conversations with her bitter and bowed husband. At the end of life, Grushin concludes that the impossible, irresistible path of art is what’s most joyful—and memorable. (Feb.)

Review
Praise for Forty Rooms
“It is author Olga Grushin’s tantalizing storytelling device that pulls her readers through the narrative as if wandering through an architect’s blueprint of a home still very much under construction. In “Forty Rooms” she has found an original storytelling device that should add to her growing acclaim.” — Minneapolis Star-Tribune

“[An] ingenious and original conceit...Forty Rooms is a deft, engaging novel written with rare eloquence. But a ferociously uncompromising morality play lurks within it.” — Wall Street Journal

“The structure of Olga Grushin's FORTY ROOMS is ingeniously simple...there is enough material to warrant hours of contemplation...The reader's impulse to grapple with the text, to wrestle it down and to raise objections or to attempt to identify her own place in the context of the story, is a sign not of weakness, but of Grushin's genius. There is no redemption story to relax into here, and no easy answers...This novel reminds us that to pursue her dreams, a woman is working against the establishment, not with it. To the young women into whose hands I will most certainly be putting Grushin's novel, I will say this: You can do it all, but together we can create a world in which we might be able to do more. Because if we don't keep working for greater gender equality, it's not in the best interests of the current power brokers to stop us from continuing to spend more than a fair share of our lives elbow-deep in soapsuds whether we choose to or not.” -- Alexandra Fuller, New York Times Book Review

“Grushin is too sly to be bound by cliché. If Mrs. Caldwell fails to be true to herself—and that "if" is sincere—this is because there are real questions about who that true self is. These are questions that women, especially, will recognize. Honest, tender, and exquisitely crafted. A novel to savor.” — Kirkus, starred review

"[A]n enchanted meditation on poetry and life... Grushin best captures the nagging regrets of her tortured artist in a magically lyrical pair of conversations with her bitter and bowed husband." — Publishers Weekly

“This book is captivating in both concept and execution. It's a collection of 40 short stories that follow a woman through her life, one story for each room she inhabits, from her childhood home to her college apartment to her first house and beyond. We're with her when, as a young girl, she talks with a mermaid in her mother's bedroom, and when, as a grown woman, her marriage begins to crumble. Filled with beautiful and surreal moments that perfectly capture the magic that can exist in real life, this book has extraordinary depth of imagination and emotion.” —  Bustle

“A young female poet, shedding Soviet Moscow for an American education, wants only “to live in a timeless poem.” But time catches up to her with brutal stealth, and before too long she’s “Mrs. Caldwell,” a wealthy suburban housewife without a stanza to show for it. Grushin, the Russian-American author of the extraordinary Dream Life of Sukhanov, spins a Bovary plot into a mystical tapestry, complete with ghostly harbingers, jarring shifts in perspective, and linguistic fillips most native-born writers would envy. She also crafts a feminist response to Joyce’s Stephen Dedalus — an artist navigating life backwards in heels.” —Boris Kachka, Vulture

“Grushin is after something beyond the conflict between artistic expression and the aspirations of well-to-do suburbanites, or even the question of whether Mrs. Caldwell has sold out. The genius of Forty Rooms is instead its suggestion that a betrayal of childhood dreams can still allow for a life filled with meaning, one that is contradictory, replete with loss, contentment, regret and its own definition of purpose. Forty Rooms is a beautiful, moving novel of dreams that reflects life as it is lived.” —Jeanette Zwart, Shelf Awareness

“Sly and devastating…Full of original and quoted poems, this heartbreaking novel is an invitation to contemplate whether the richness and ambition of one’s life has to correspond to the proportions of one’s landscape.”  — O Magazine

“Grushin beautifully renders a riddle of our time” — Chicago Tribune

"Lyrical and poignant, this is an ideal read for artists who seek answers to life's biggest questions." — Bookish

“Forty Rooms is a sensitive and exquisitely told meditation on the pleasures of art.” — BookPage

“But this novel isn’t after perfection, either of life or work. Rather, it shows how life is built out of adjustment — dreams tempered and poetry transformed into prose.” — Boston Globe

Praise for The Dream Life of Sukhanov 

“Grushin’s beautifully constructed puzzle is a triumph of singular yet universal genius.”
—Boris Kachka, New York magazine

“Make no mistake about it: The Dream Life of Sukhanov is the work of a true artist . . . in its expansiveness, its refusal to dwell on the tiny palace of self, it harks back to the great Russian masters. In so doing, it breathes new life into American literary fiction.” —Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post Book World

“To write a novel as good as this, you have to be very talented. And Grushin is.”—Financial Times

“Ironic, surreal, sometimes stunning . . . Gogolesque in its sardonic humor.” —Richard Eder, The New York Times

“Grushin raises the bar for first novels. Like all excellent works, it does one unusual enough thing: It fills one with joy, because it works at every level.” —The Irish Times

“[A] stunning fictional debut, and a book which reminds us of what a superb contribution the Russian tradition has made, and can still make, to the literary art, compared with our own fallen and humdrum literary world.” —The Independent (UK)

“Grushin’s haunting dreamscape of her native land is a debut to be cheered here, there and everywhere.”—Dan Cryer, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“In Grushin’s wonderful novel, the incandescent wealth of Russia’s literary heritage blazes.”—Ruth Scurr, Daily Telegraph 

Praise for The Line   
 
“Utterly brilliant . . . recommended ecstatically.”—Library Journal
 
“A writer of tremendous talent.”—Elif Batuman, The New York Times Book Review
 
“If you missed Grushin’s first book, [this] is your chance to catch a rising star as she establishes herself in the top ranks of American authors.”—Garrett Kenyon, LitKicks.com
 
“I’m not sure which is the bigger accomplishment, Grushin’s ability to depict the tumult, disappointment and daily grind of life in post-revolution Russia, or the light touch of her style. The  city her characters inhabit may be oppressive, but The Line is not.”—Jessa Crispin, “What We’re Reading,” NPR.org
 
 

About the Author
Olga Grushin was born in Moscow in 1971. After studying art and journalism in Moscow, she was awarded a full scholarship to Emory University in 1989. Her first novel, The Dream Life of Sukhanov, earned her a place on Granta's list of Best Young American Novelists and won her the New York Public Library's Young Lions Award; it was also a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Best First Novel award and for Britain's Orange Prize. In 2002 she became an American citizen. She lives in Potomac, Maryland.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Beautiful
By M. Dallas
So many of us could relate to this character. Moving through the chapters, I realized heart-wrenching similarities, and I, like others, am Mrs Caldwell. Strong melodic ending. Looking forward to more from Olga Grushin.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Worth Reading
By S. E. Carr
Same poetic flow to her storytelling as The Line and The Dreamlife of Sukanhof. But Forty Rooms left me disappointed. Still working on this...

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Boring and Banal Story, Beautifully Written
By Lisa
I understand why so many reviewers are rating this book highly. I thought it was well-written, and interesting stylistically, weaving the magical together with reality. I like the first quarter of the book, describing the young woman’s fight against traditional expectations.

But then it turned into the life of a woman who is totally unable to mature or make any kind of sensible decisions in her own life. Instead, she lets her tediously conventional but extremely abundant life happen around her while complaining about it the whole time.

Spoiler Alert: I only finished the book to see if she ever made a decision to take control of her own life; or was she really a mentally ill person imagining the whole thing. Sadly, neither was part of the story line.

See all 49 customer reviews...

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