The lady of the mine

Sergeĭ Lebedev, 1981-

Book - 2025

"The mystical laundress at the center of this novel is obsessed with purity. Her task is formidable as she stands guard over a sealed shaft at a Ukrainian coal mine that hides terrible truths. The bodies of dead Jews lying in its depths seem to attract still more present-day crimes. Sergei Lebedev portrays a ghostly realm riven by lust and fear just as the Kremlin invades the same part of Ukraine occupied by the Wehrmacht in World War II. Then corpses rain from the sky when a jetliner is shot down overhead, scattering luxury goods along with the mortal remains. Eerie coincidences and gruesome discoveries fill this riveting exploration of an uncanny place where the geography exudes violence, and where the sins of the past are never all ...that in the past. Lebedev, who has won international praise for his soul-searching prose and unflinching examination of history's evils, shines light on the fault line where Nazism met Soviet communism, evolving into the new fascism of today's Russia."--Back cover.

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FICTION/Lebedev Sergei
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Lebedev Sergei (NEW SHELF) Due May 20, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Science fiction
Paranormal fiction
Published
New York : New Vessel Press [2025]
Language
English
Russian
Main Author
Sergeĭ Lebedev, 1981- (author)
Other Authors
Antonina W. Bouis (translator)
Physical Description
233 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781954404304
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In the transfixing latest from Russian writer Lebedev (A Present Past), the ghosts of wars past are exhumed in 2014 eastern Ukraine. Kharkiv college student Zhanna returns to her hometown to care for her ailing mother, Marianna, a laundress endowed with an "enchanted" power whose nature is unknown to Zhanna. After Russian troops stealthily invade the region, Zhanna cannot return to her university. Meanwhile, villainous next-door neighbor Valet, who Marianna banished from the town after learning he'd robbed an abandoned mine shaft used by the Nazis as a mass grave during WWII, is back after spending six years in Moscow. Now serving as an undercover agent for the Russian police, he's tasked with breaking up pro-Ukraine demonstrations. Lebedev alternates perspectives between Zhanna, Valet, a Russian general, and the ghost of the mine's engineer, gradually revealing Marianna's mystical purpose and the mine's use as a mass grave in several wars, dating back to the 1905 socialist revolution. The narrative also juxtaposes stark and horrifying present-day images, such as bodies falling from a passenger plane shot down by Russian forces, with lyrical impressions from the engineer ("You have no idea how many spirits inhabit your netherworld"). It's a bleak and electrifying tour de force. (Jan.)

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