The Rooster House
My Ukrainian Family Story, A Memoir
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
A timely and deeply moving memoir of journalist Victoria Belim’s Ukrainian family history, interwoven with the country’s turbulent story
In 2014, the landmarks of Victoria Belim’s personal geography were plunged into tumult at the hands of Russia. Her hometown, Kyiv, was gripped by protests and violence. Crimea, where she’d once been sent to school to avoid radiation from the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl, was invaded. Kharkiv, where her grandmother Valentina studied economics and fell in love; Donetsk, where her father once worked; and Mariupol, where she and her mother bought a cherry tree for Valentina’s garden, all became battlegrounds.
Victoria, by then a naturalized American citizen then living in Brussels, felt she had to go back. She had to spend time with her aging grandmother and her cousin Dmytro. She had to unravel a family mystery spanning several generations. And she needed to understand how her country’s tragic history of communist revolution, civil war, famine, world war, totalitarianism, and fraught independence had changed the course of their lives.
The Rooster House is a beautifully written memoir of a family, a country’s past, and its dangerous present. It is about parents and children, true believers and victims, gardens and art, secrets and tragedy. Compulsively readable, deeply moving, and at times laugh-out-loud funny, it is a stunning debut book by an experienced, expressive, and gifted writer.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
In this striking memoir, a journalist takes a personal trip through the nation of Ukraine. Victoria Belim was born in Kyiv when it was still part of the Soviet Union and emigrated to the United States as a teenager. When Russia invaded Crimea in 2014, Belim was overwhelmed by buried emotions and memories, spurring her to visit her now-independent homeland to try to uncover long-hidden family secrets. Thanks to her vivid descriptions of her family—especially her vivacious, proud grandmother Valentina—and Ukrainian folk art and culture, Belim’s book is a feast for the senses. (In particular, the many meals she eats with her family had us salivating.) Venture through the changing landscapes of Ukraine with this evocative and witty real-life tale of rediscovering home.