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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Snake charmer -- Pastan's novel captivates head and heart, January 21, 2008
Usually I tear into a book but this time I felt like "Lady of the Snakes" devoured me and left me an extremely satisfied reader. As a motherhood writer myself, I've read hundreds of books about the tradeoffs between work and family that all mothers have to face. Since reading is part of my work, at this point in my life I am generally burned out about reading about motherhood, and have little patience for either dense literary fiction or fluffy "chick lit."
Against that background, "Lady of the Snakes" was a wonderful treat. Incredibly honest about the everyday realities of a young academic juggling work and family, yet engrossing on the level of big questions; compulsively readable and convincingly literary at the same time. Rachel Pastan creates believable voices for both her modern heroine, Professor Jane Levitsky, and Jane's research subject, Russian countess Maria Karkova. (Quite an accomplishment given that Pastan had to create the excerpts of Karkova's journals and letters as well as the fictional 19th-century literary masterpieces of her husband Grigory Karkov.)
The academic mystery/counterplot about Karkov and Karkova is involving even if you have no background in Russian literature. The relationships between Karkov and Karkova, Jane and Maria, Jane and her husband Billy, and Jane and her academic rivals avoid easy categorization, mirroring the complicated textures and ambivalence of real life. I was touched by Jane's honesty about the tug she felt toward her work even as she cared deeply for her young daughter.
"Lady of the Snakes" would make an ideal book club selection. If you enjoyed Allegra Goodman's Intuition or A. S. Byatt's Possession: A Romance I highly recommend "Lady of the Snakes."
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Terrific Read, May 28, 2008
Rachel Pastan's Lady of the Snakes is a really terrific read, just a delightful way to spend a few hours. The novel opens as Jane Levitsky, a Russian literature Ph.D. candidate is about to give birth and is focused on the life of another woman, Masha Karkova, the wife of a fictional Russian novelist. Her thoughts lead to comment to a friend, which in turn send her in search of the truth about Masha, her husband, his novels and her journals. Jane has to balance the life of a (working) scholar with that of a wife and mother. The truth she seeks manages to disrupt both her professional and her personal life and she struggles for the balance that most working mom's grapple with. Jane is a sympathetic protagonist, not perfect. One of her experiences that was spot on was her search for child care for her daughter. Pastan captures that dilemma and the hypocricies surrounding it perfectly. I really enjoyed this novel--a sort of Possession-lite. I've seen it referred to as "literary chick lit", but I think the "chick lit" tag is a bit demeaning. The Lady of the Snakes is much more substantive than that genre. This is a really terrific read that I highly recommend. Enjoy!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Don't you know the difference between life and art?", January 14, 2008
A professor of 19th century Russian literature and an expert on the novels of Grigory Karkov, Jane Levitsky has immersed herself in academia, her obsession the diaries of Grigory's wife, Masha Karkova. But life interferes with the birth of a daughter, Maisie, thrusting Jane and husband Billy into the usual dilemmas of new parenthood. Sleep-deprived and short of tolerance, Jane attends to the baby's incessant demands, all the while longing for the comfort of Masha's world, the Russian's diaries revealing a complicated life, wife and mother married to a demanding genius. Fortunately for Jane, Billy is accommodating and helpful, doing his best to alleviate the burdens of motherhood and career; but there is nothing a husband can do to resolve the issue Jane faces: the clash of family and career, the frustrating trade-offs of limited time and demands that cannot be ignored: "Time was like fruit left rotting on the vine."
Two years later, Jane's burdens are exacerbated by a move to Wisconsin, where she accepts a teaching position at the University, the opportunity for a stellar career move within reach, in the same department as Professor Otto Sigelmann, aficionado of all things Karkov. While Jane focuses on Masha, the professor remains Karkov's greatest champion, a sly colleague she would do well to keep at arms length concerning her own interests. Floundering a bit in her first real teaching position, Jane escapes into Masha's diaries, developing an affinity for the Russian woman's personal challenges, her poignant words flowing between the centuries, linking the two in common angst. In real time, however, Jane and Billy are beset by the nightmare of childcare that is faced by young working parents, the couple sliding into routine, the spontaneity of their marriage slipping away with the days that pass too quickly.
Pastan does an admirable job of illustrating the frustrations of a career woman learning the harsh lessons of balancing work and home, the demands and daily frustrations, the fear that one must choose one or the other, not both. Just as Jane stumbles across a discovery that may establish her credentials in Russian literature, her home life cracks along predictable fault lines. Although she spends many chapters wallowing in discontent, Jane is eventually jarred out of a complacency that has become all too seductive, even Masha Karkov's life revealing conflicts beyond what Jane has anticipated. After much pain, both academic and personal, Jane must reassess her options, weighing career, family and reality. With Masha as inspiration, Jane faces the future from an altered perspective, harbinger of a new maturity. Realizing that vipers are everywhere, Jane learns to navigate more carefully through her particular world, embracing shortcomings as well as achievements. Luan Gaines/ 2008.
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