Something unbelievable A novel

Maria Kuznetsova

Book - 2021

"Larissa is a stubborn, brutally honest woman in her eighties, tired of her home in Kiev, Ukraine, tired of everything in life, really, except for her beloved granddaughter, Natasha. Natasha is tired as well, but that's because she has just had a baby, and she's struggling to balance her roles as a new mother, a wife, an actress (or she used to be, anyway), and a host to her husband's greasy-haired, useless best friend, Stas, who has been staying with them in Brooklyn. When Natasha asks Larissa to tell the story of her family's Soviet wartime escape from the Nazis in Kiev, Larissa reluctantly agrees. Perhaps Natasha is just looking for distraction from her own life, but Larissa is desperate to make her happy, even t...hough the story hurts to tell. But as she recounts the three-year period when she fled with her difficult sister, their parents, and grandmother to an abandoned army village in the Ural Mountains, and the series of unfortunate events that occurred there, such as near starvation, a cholera outbreak, a tragic suicide, and a complex love triangle with two brothers from a privileged family - neither Larissa nor Natasha can anticipate how loudly these lessons of the past will echo in their present moments. Navigating between Larissa and Natasha's perspectives, then and now, Something Unbelievable explores with piercing wit and tender feeling just how much our circumstances shape our lives and what we pass along to the younger generations, willingly or not."--Provided by publisher.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York : Random House [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Maria Kuznetsova (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 272 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780525511908
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Kuznetsova follows up her dazzling debut, Oksana, Behave! (2019), with another lively tale of a grandmother and her granddaughter. As Larissa approaches her ninetieth year, her beloved granddaughter Natasha, an actor and new mother living in New York City, begs Larissa to recount in detail the story of her family's plight during WWII, when Larissa's own flamboyant grandmother Antonina lost her life. Over a series of Skype calls, Larissa grants Natasha's request, sharing the story of her family's flight from Kiev to the mountain town of Turinsk when she was a teenager. Unsentimental Larissa thought herself immune to the flights of fancy that her younger, more delicate sister Polina was subject to, but as the family faced hardship and food shortages, she found herself drawn into romantic intrigue with the two handsome Orlov brothers, one of whom she'd eventually marry, while facing unimaginable grief over a sudden devastating loss. As Natasha grapples with postpartum depression, Larissa realizes that her granddaughter is on the brink of a potential misstep that could upend her life and agrees to a visit to see Natasha's one-act play and meet her baby. An introspective look at the stages of life and what means the most at each phase, Kuznetsova's second outing is an emotional powerhouse.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Kuznetsova (Oksana, Behave!) tediously unfolds the story of a new mother's relationship with her Ukrainian grandmother. As Natasha Schulman waits for her "soul to be filled" by her infant daughter, she's encouraged by Stas, her husband's friend and a "waiter-slash-poet-slash-heartbreaker" who has been crashing in their New York City apartment, to pursue her languishing acting career. Over Skype, Natasha's grandmother Larissa Fyodorovna recalls events leading to her own grandmother's suicide during WWII after the family was evacuated from Kiev to a remote town. Then 13, Larissa was torn between two boys: "striking, dashing" Misha, whom she eventually married, and his "smug and excitable" younger brother. Stas, privy to the women's conversations, suggests Natasha stage a one-woman play of Larissa's story, and Natasha invites Larissa to come see it. Larissa, a cigarette-smoking widow, is colorfully drawn, though her blunt, mean-spirited dialogue often reduces her to a cliché: the baby is "hideous" and "rat-faced"; Larissa's sister was "smelly" and "spoiled"; Stas looks like an "impudent long-haired homosexual." Clear parallels between Larissa's adolescent crushes and Natasha's marriage are made unnecessarily explicit, as when Natasha asks if Larissa regrets her choice of whom to marry. While the characters can be lively, there's not enough to hold readers' interest. Agent: Henry Dunow, Dunow, Carlson & Lerner Literary. (Apr.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Thirtysomething Natasha struggles with exhaustion and boredom at home with a new baby in New York City, feeling alienated from her formerly glamorous and slightly louche life as an actress/bartender. To engage her, Natasha's world-weary 90-year-old Russian grandmother, Larissa, agrees to tell her beloved American granddaughter the story of her own complicated, unhappy family and their survival during World War II. (They talk via Skype.) Along with her parents and her self-absorbed sister and grandmother, Larissa had been forced to relocate to freezing Siberia, where her engineer father worked on weapons for the war effort and the family nearly starved to death. Certain plot points of the family saga, like Larissa's feelings for the two brothers next door, mirror elements of the Russian novels loved by the protagonists. Kuznetsova (Oksana, Behave!) alternates Larissa's story with Natasha's; both women have distinctive points of view. The same tension between the practical and the artistic temperament runs through the generations, and Natasha seems to be repeating some of the life choices made by her grandmother, for better or worse. VERDICT A moving intergenerational story with an unforgettable wartime narrative steeped in literature.--Lauren Gilbert, Ctr. for Jewish History, New York

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Present and past mirror each other as an aged Russian woman tells her American granddaughter the story of their family's struggles to survive the German invasion of the Soviet Union during World War II. Kiev-born Kuznetsova begins her novel with a knowing nod to Russian literature: a formal character list that pointedly includes pet cats and gives clues to the plot ahead. The opening scene reads like a traditional framing device when Natasha, a Russian born, American-raised actress Skyping with her almost 90-year-old Baba Larissa in Kiev, asks for the full story behind how Larissa's grandmother Tonya died in WWII. And at first, new mother Natasha's typical millennial ambivalence toward domesticity seems less important than Larissa's story. In a tough, cynical voice devoid of sentimentality, Larissa describes how, in 1940, after a life of coddled comfort lasting through Communist rule, her suddenly penniless grandmother Tonya moved in with her engineer son, Fyodor, Larissa's father. Soon Germany's invasion forced Fyodor and family to evacuate Kiev to Lower Turinsk, accompanied by the Orlovs, a fellow engineer's family. Tonya favored Larissa's younger sister, Polya, whom the bookish 13-year-old Larissa considered a frivolous "lobotomized swan." But family roles began to change as survival required increasingly difficult sacrifices and ethical choices. While Larissa discovered complicated romantic feelings toward the two Orlov brothers, Polya turned inward and Tonya grew pathetically demented. Meanwhile, the original framing device begins to dissolve as the secrets Larissa reveals (or keeps hidden) about herself and Tonya parallel the crises Natasha faces--loving her (unbelievably understanding) husband and infant daughter while becoming dangerously attracted to her husband's friend Stas, who represents the free-spirited independence she craves. In shifting first-person narratives in which they analyze each other with assumptions that may or may not be accurate, Natasha and Larissa build a portrait of family love in all its variations. Most compelling when history intersects with the emotions of women figuring out their lives today. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Larissa My granddaughter, Natasha, has a long history of caring for unfortunate creatures. When she was a little girl, a recent transplant to America, she and her father would rescue endless varieties of pathetic fauna from the woods behind their dilapidated New Jerseyan duplex--­broken-­winged birds and feeble rabbits and one-­eyed kittens that they would fail to nurse back to health until their dim flames were nearly extinguished. Whenever I visited from Kiev, I would try to put a stop to this nonsense, of course. Natasha's mother and I would take the pitiful creatures to the backyard and put them out of their misery with a frying pan under cover of night. Oh, her mother, Valentina, was a force, a stunning, steely woman with a vicious gleam in her eye as she wiped the bloody pan on the grass, wanting to harden her daughter against the cold world. But what can you do, she died of breast cancer when Natasha was seventeen, leaving her alone with my hapless son, so the girl has remained as soft as a whore's bottom. When my son was felled by a heart attack five years ago and handsome Yuri, his former student, began courting Natasha, I thought finally, finally, she will settle down, stop caring for useless men, and have someone care for her. And last year, when she told me she and Yuri were expecting a child, I thought, Well, yes, she will have to make some compromises with her acting career, but she will be a natural! I recalled her rapturous, Madonna-­like gaze when she beheld her ailing creatures, and later, the slew of stinky pets she took into her various cramped New York apartments, and I thought, She has my simpleton sister's animal-­caretaking genes; she'll also love holding a crying nothing to her breast, much more than I did anyway. But when she first materialized on my computer screen with the rat-­faced girl in her arms, she looked weary and ruined and sweat­covered, shaking my faith in her abilities. She has spent most of the three months since her daughter's birth chained to her infant and lately, also caring for Stas, Yuri's overly young, greasy-haired deadbeat of a friend who fled the Boston suburb where they were raised under murky circumstances, whom she was kind enough to take in. When I see her this evening, her pale skin emerging in the morning light of her living room, her dark eyes swollen and sleepless, she brings to mind a clump of hair I yanked out of my shower drain just last week. She is holding her hideous baby girl, Talia, stroking her cheek in hopes that she will drift off. "Now, listen, child," I say. "If you train that girl to sleep in your arms, she will become a mother-dependent namby-­pamby. You should do what my parents did to me, and what I did to your father. Put her in her crib until she is filled with existential understanding. She will see that she is all alone in a cold universe and must drift off on her own. And while she's in there, you should leave the apartment and go for a stroll or see a movie." She laughs and shakes her wilted head. "I'll consider it." "Some would call that child abuse," says Stas from a dark corner of the apartment. Lately, his presence has been as reliable as that of Sharik, Natasha's vulgar orange cat. "Oh please," I tell him. "Everyone did it in the Soviet Union, and we raised a generation of strong men." "Alcoholics," he says. "Strong alcoholics," I concede. "Don't you have somewhere to be?" "Not at all," he says, approaching the computer to give me a slick little smile, and I shake my head at Natasha for not telling this pesky creature to leave. She turns to the derelict boy at last. "Why don't you go take that stroll my grandmother was talking about?" "Fine, fine," he says, lifting a grubby hand at me, and soon enough the door slams shut. Natasha watches him go and then fusses with the quilt on her worn green leather couch and then the threadbare garage sale rug on the floor with her free hand, a desperate attempt to create order. When her gaze returns to me, she looks even more out of sorts. "Listen," she says, "there's something I wanted to ask you." "Oh dear," I say, and I feel nervous all of a sudden, though what could she possibly want from me? Could she be asking for money at last? "Don't freak out," she says, but she does nothing to calm me down. "But I was wondering--­would you mind telling me the story of how your grandmother died during World War Two?" I take a moment to collect myself. Why on Earth is she asking now? "Of course I can tell you," I say. "She threw herself under a train. Then the war ended." "Right," she says. "But I was wondering if you would go a bit more in-­depth? You always promised to tell me the whole story, and I thought, Tally would want to learn her history one day--­" "And soon I will evaporate and you will have no story to remember." "That's not what I'm saying." "You didn't have to." I take a drag on my cigarette and consider the days ahead. I wonder if she truly wants the story, or if she is only asking because she thinks I need more help than one of her mangled rabbits, a distraction to keep the abyss at bay. I have told her bits and pieces of the story over the years, but never from start to finish, because the girl has the attention span of a ferret and because talking about the war for too long wears at my heart. But what else do I have to live for? Old isn't gold--­I am approaching my ninetieth brutal year and wouldn't mind being clubbed over the head with a frying pan myself. A season has passed since I buried my husband and the days are long. My body is betraying me and my dear Kiev is of no use to me now. Seeing it in its early summer glory without having the able body to enjoy its lush gardens and verdant parks reminds me of longing for Styopa Antonov, a graduate student and Lermontov scholar who studied under me in 1962, a charming man with the firmest buttocks whom I could not touch on account of my marriage--­well, now that I think of it, we did carry on after a while, but you get the point. So! I used to hold literary salons in my elegant home filled with obscenely youthful, lust-­crazed students arguing about whether or not Yesenin truly committed suicide and sneaking off to neck on the balcony. Now my main source of entertainment is packing up the few things I'd like to take from my apartment down to my cottage on the Black Sea, and letting my husband's men sell the rest. Chatting with Natasha could only ease my suffering. "Fine, fine," I tell her. "Why not?" "Really?" she says, her bloodshot eyes lighting up in genuine surprise. "I thought it would take a bit more convincing." "Let's get on with it." She is startled once more, caressing the limp strands on her daughter's head. "Right now?" "I don't have forever." "All right then," she says. She puts a finger to her lips and tells me to wait a second, she has to figure out how to record the call, if that's all right with me. Then she pats her girl's butt, and the helpless thing shuts her unknowable eyes, a creature as alien to me as a space monkey, as far away from my Kiev kitchen as a distant planet, an American-­born girl whose parents left their homeland as schoolchildren and will hardly be able to pass their Soviet legacy down to her, though they did surprise me by naming her Natalia after my mother, and now Natasha seems to think the girl will one day feel tied to her mother's Motherland from hearing my sad story. Currently, the only Soviet thing about the child is that with the cosmically disappointed look on her face, she brings to mind Gorbachev during his resignation announcement. Well, what else is there for me to do? I wait for my pathetic little great­granddaughter to settle, and then I begin. Excerpted from Something Unbelievable: A Novel by Maria Kuznetsova All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.