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Book Review: An Armenian Sketchbook Full Of Endearing Vignettes

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  • Book Review: An Armenian Sketchbook Full Of Endearing Vignettes

    BOOK REVIEW: AN ARMENIAN SKETCHBOOK FULL OF ENDEARING VIGNETTES

    The National, UAE
    Aug 3 2013

    Noori Passela
    Aug 3, 2013

    An Armenian Sketchbook
    Vasily Grossman
    Translated by Robert and Elizabeth Chandler
    MacLehose Press

    The year 1961 finds the Soviet writer and journalist Vasily Grossman
    on a train to Yerevan, Armenia. Mentally and spiritually exhausted
    from the KGB's seizure of his novel Life and Fate, Grossman spends
    two months editing a Russian translation of a long Armenian novel,
    glad of the opportunity to travel to the country.

    However, as seen through the series of vignettes which form the whole
    of An Armenian Sketchbook, Grossman is a writer who takes detours
    parallel to the work of translating a scene from one culture to
    another. His first day in Yerevan is spent wandering about in dazed
    panic through the many colourful courtyards that form the maze of
    the city's inner sanctum. As he gradually adjusts to the sights and
    sensations of a simpler life, its effects linger on in the warmth
    with which he later recalls them.

    There is many a poignant tale to be told in Grossman's brief sojourn.

    Like the characters that fill its pages, An Armenian Sketchbook is
    enigmatic and endearing.

    http://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/books/book-review-an-armenian-sketchbook-full-of-endearing-vignettes

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