Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Jamey Gambrell

    Jamey Gambrell is a writer and translator with a focus on Russian art and culture. Her English translations encompass seminal works by Vladimir Sorokin, including his Ice Trilogy and Day of the Oprichnik. Gambrell has also rendered into English significant works by Marina Tsvetaeva and Tatyana Tolstaya, such as Tolstaya's novel The Slynx. Her scholarship and translations offer insightful access to the Russian literary and cultural landscape.

    The Inner Circle
    Earthly Signs
    Ice
    • Ice

      • 321 pages
      • 12 hours of reading
      3.7(23)Add rating

      Ice is at the center of Vladimir Sorokin's epic Ice Trilogy, which is also published by NYRB Classics.Moscow has been hit by a wave of brutal murders. The victims are of both sexes, from different backgrounds, and of all ages, but invariably blond and blue-eyed. They are found with their breastbones smashed in, their hearts crushed. There is no sign of any motive. Drugs, sex, and violence are the currency of daily life in Moscow. Criminal gangs and unscrupulous financial operators run the show. But in the midst of so much squalor one mysterious group is pursuing a long-meditated plan. Blond and blue-eyed, with a strange shared attraction to a chunk of interstellar ice, they are looking for their brothers and sisters, precisely 23,000 of them. Lost among the common herd of humanity, they must be awakened and set free. How? With a crude hammer fashioned out of the cosmic ice. Humans, meat machines, die under its blows. The hearts of the chosen answer by uttering their true names. For the first time they know the ecstasy of true life. For the awakened, the future, like the past, is simple. It is ice.

      Ice
    • Earthly Signs

      • 280 pages
      • 10 hours of reading
      3.6(55)Add rating

      A moving collection of autobiographical essays from a Russian poet and refugee of the Bolshevik Revolution. Marina Tsvetaeva ranks with Anna Akhmatova, Osip Mandelstam, and Boris Pasternak as one of Russia’s greatest twentieth-century poets. Her suicide at the age of forty-eight was the tragic culmination of a life buffeted by political upheaval. The essays collected in this volume are based on diaries she kept during the turbulent years of the Revolution and Civil War. In them she records conversations of women in the markets, soldiers and peasants on the train traveling from the Crimea to Moscow in October 1917, fighting in the streets of Moscow, a frantic scramble with co-workers to dig frozen potatoes out of a cellar, and poetry readings organized by a newly minted Soviet bohemia. Alone in Moscow with two small children, no income, and a missing husband, Tsvetaeva struggled to feed her daughters (one of whom died of malnutrition in an orphanage), find employment in the Soviet bureaucracy, and keep writing poetry. Her keen and ruthless eye observes with compassion and humor—bringing the social, economic, and cultural chaos of the period to life. These autobiographical writings not only give a vivid eyewitness account of Russian history but provide vital insights into the workings of Tsvetaeva’s unique poetics. Includes black and white photographs.

      Earthly Signs
    • The Inner Circle

      An Inside View of Soviet Life Under Stalin - The Companion to the Columbia Pictures Feature Film

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The official movie tie-in to the Columbia Pictures feature film The Inner Circle—the photographs and the history that inspired the distinguished Russian director while making his latest film, now collected in this new revealing portrait of a period. More than 100 black-and-white photos.

      The Inner Circle