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K**N
Incredible book
This book, at its core, is about power (and powerlessness), and luck. It is totally compelling, jarring, poignant, electrifying. I blew through it in a weekend; it was so incredibly good. Typically, "thrillers" or plot-driven narratives lose me quickly because I don't love the writing and therefore don't feel connected to the characters. In this case, there is a propulsive plot that I cared about because the characters are so vividly drawn that I had to know what happened, It helped that the settings were strange and intense, and I learned so much and all of it was unexpected and fascinating. It's not a sentimental book, and yet it is so moving. Absolutely my favorite so far this year, I will recommend it to everyone!
M**G
Clever & captivating & very recommended!
I was lucky enough to get my hands on an advance copy of Lights All Night Long. This clever and captivating novel contains elements of mystery, romance, crime, and travelogue. But at its core, it’s a coming-of-age story of loyalty and commitment, connection and isolation, and risk and reward.The characters and the twists of their lives manage to be both relatable and exotic.The author does a wonderful job of placing the story in two vastly different worlds - Russia and Louisiana - while very successfully linking the settings through their common small-town, company town roots.The venue- and time-shifting structure of the book is intriguing and keeps the reader’s attention and interest piqued.An excellent and exciting debut novel.
S**S
One that I couldn’t wait to get back to reading at the end of each day!
I absolutely adored this novel.The writing is smooth & dialogue flows easily, without being trite or forced.I loved all the characters, despite their flaws.There is both comedy & tragedy, and the novel offers so much to think about without becoming depressing. It’s a coming of age story, without being a silly romance.And there’s also a bit of mystery/suspense without this being what I’d call a mystery novel.I’m so impressed that the author could incorporate all these different elements into one tightly-written story.Additionally, if you have any familiarity with Russian language and Russian culture, you will like the tidbits of language thrown in.Just a great read and is now one of my absolute favorites on my Covid-quarantine reading list!
C**Y
Interesting Tale. Small Russian town - small Louisiana town - Exchange Student
This book had an interesting premise. This is largely the story of Ilya - a high schooler in a depressed Russian town that centers around a refinery. His bleak hometown was described vividly. Freezing cold, communal apartment living (shared kitchen & bathroom areas) - little or no hope or opportunity. His father is deceased, his mother is a graveyard shift cafeteria worker, his grandmother is a coat check girl. Living is hand to mouth, even in this modern era. The author really brought to life the Russian town and the utter bleakness the residents lived under. Ilya & his older brother are obsessed with U.S. pop culture and dream of emigrating.. Ilya, a talented natural linguist gets the chance to come to the U.S. for a year as an exchange student sponsored by the refinery. Serious plot twists and turns take place, most involving his wayward, but lovable older brother , Vladimir. Ilya makes it to the U.S and lives with a Bible Belt Louisiana family, whose town is also associated with the global refinery. Louisiana wasn't as well described as Russia was. It could have been any small Southern town. However, this book was heartfelt, sad, hopeful and entertaining all at the same time. It lagged a bit and reads much like a young adult novel. However, the themes of redemption, the exploration into drug addiction, and the ultimately hopeful tone really smoothed out any rough spots.
R**S
Finely imagined, finely written debut novel
To me, this is a novel that expertly weaves three significant plot lines – Ilya coming to America, the mystery of three murders, and Vladimir’s drug addiction – along with the stories of several other significant characters – Maria Michailovna and her husband Dmitri, Gabe Thompson, plus Sadie and the mother who abandoned her. All of these plotlines are skillfully handled so that they come together in the end. Similarly, all of these characters, as well as those of Ilya’s and Sadie’s families, come to the reader as distinct individuals. This is a world, or two worlds, that come alive.The central character, Ilya, is beset by a conflict. Although he wants to go to America and seems to recognize it as an opportunity that can change his life for the better, he nevertheless cares more about his wayward brother Vladimir, and about being accepted by Vladimir and his circle of drug using friends. He even sacrifices taking his exams and is willing to do krokodil to gain their acceptance. It’s only Vladimir’s intelligence, his recognition of Ilya’s potential, that saves Ilya from doing drugs and losing his chance to go to America. In a nice twist, although Ilya wants very much to save his brother throughout the novel, it is his brother who saves him.The parallels between the Russian and American worlds are striking, particularly, I think, for those of us who tend to think America is unequivocally superior to Russia. The comparison of Berlozhniki with Leffie works on many levels. It begins when Papa Cam pulls into “a cul-de-sac where a lone house bit a chunk out of the sky. It was as graceless as a kommunalka.” Moreover, just as Ilya’s mother works in a refinery, so too Papa Cam works in a refinery. Both refineries are visible from the characters’ homes. This is not to say there aren’t differences, as when Ilya notes about the Mason’s house: “the house did seem like something on TV. It was all polish; it lacked dimension, it lacked the smells and sounds and smudges that were life in the kommunalkas.”The most obvious parallel between America and Russia appears in the ravages of drug use. Individuals close to Ilya and Sadie are affected, which brings the issue into the foreground and makes it personal rather than an abstract societal problem.I particularly enjoyed the depiction of the Mason’s church. Initially, the church and pastor are presented in almost perverse terms: “The pastor looked like a porn star . . .[his] sermon was a mishmash of sound bites.” But at the end of the novel, the congregation generously takes up a collection to fund Vladimir’s stay in America, and Pastor Kyle recommends Tomorrow’s Sunrise as a facility that can help Sadie’s mom escape her addiction.Perhaps what I appreciated most was the quality of the prose; on every page it’s rich and detailed in its descriptions of people and places. Also, in a novel that is quite serious in its intent, there is nevertheless a steady stream of subtle and not-so-subtle humor, as when Ilya comments about the Mason’s pool: “But he hadn’t ever thought of this: in America they light their pools...” Or Vladimir on the shopkeeper: “Did you see his mouth? He looks like he’s been sucking cock for a decade.” Or Babushka telling Ilya, “Even you can’t make English sound pretty.”If I were to have any quibble with this excellent novel, it would be with Ilya, whom I didn’t feel a lot of sympathy for because he always seemed relatively passive. His academic success came so easily that it didn’t seem like a real achievement, and even his most dramatic action—driving to see Gabe—came off rather easily. To me, Vladimir was the more interesting brother, and heroic in his secretly recording Dmitri’s subterfuge. But this is a minor shortcoming in a novel that is noteworthy for so many other impressive attributes.
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