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The Red Passport: Stories [Hardcover]

Katherine Shonk (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 15, 2003
A beguiling debut collection set in the "New Russia" about love, dislocation, and the struggle to get a foothold in a changing world

The eight unpredictable, poignant, and often comic stories that make up Katherine Shonk's The Red Passport portray the tumult, hopes, and disappointments of Russians and visiting Americans alike in post-Communist Russia. Many of the Russians in these stories are strangers in their own country, learning to navigate a new landscape of Dunkin Donuts franchises that flourish where consumer culture had so recently been anathema; where the fall of the Soviet Union has not in fact brought about peace or prosperity; and where people still find a way to reach out and for love, despite often disastrous results. "My Mother's Garden" reads like a parable of broken promises--an old woman living near Chernobyl does not understand why she can't eat those robust, lovely, enormous onions, better than any she'd grown for decades. "Our American" is set in Moscow and tells the story of a thirteen year old boy who watches with fascination and dread as his older brother, a veteran of the Chechen war, pursues the naïve American girl next door. "The Young People of Moscow" describes an extraordinary day in the life of an aging Russian couple selling Soviet poetry in an underground bazaar. In her elegantly crafted stories Shonk delves deeply into these people, finding both the nub of their disappointment and the truth of their good intentions. Describing a place that is at once exotic and disconcertingly familiar, The Red Passport is a moving and startling book that doles out amazement and delight in equal measure.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In this promising debut collection set primarily in post-Communist Russia, expatriates and natives alike endeavor to make their way in a new social and economic landscape, often sharing an intense desire for whatever the other possesses: money, freedom, love, family. For Shonk, who spent time in Russia in the late 1990s, Americans abroad can be innocents, interlopers or cultural explorers. In "Kitchen Friends," an American journalist in Moscow who witnesses a trolley bombing by Chechen rebels forms a support group for the survivors, with the private hope that she can confess secrets from her Russian ancestors' dark history. Shonk avidly engages issues of displacement and loss, freedom and constraint. In the haunting "My Mother's Garden," a woman is hard-pressed to convince her mother that the town she refuses to leave is toxic, contaminated by an explosion at a nearby nuclear reactor. "It never ceases to shame me, this fear I have of touching my mother, of carrying the poison in her skin and clothes to my daughter," she thinks. In "Our American," an out-of-work former soldier insinuates himself into an American woman's life in the hopes that she will buy a pair of glasses for his little brother. As in "Honey Month" and "The Conversion," Shonk is at her best examining the lives of Americans whom the natives revere as potential saviors at the same time they dismiss them as frivolous tourists who could never hope to understand life in the former Soviet republic. That tension lends these stories an impressive vitality.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

The meeting of East and West in post-Soviet Russia is fast becoming a goldmine for such rich and provocative fiction as Fernanda Eberstadt's canny novel The Furies [BKL Ag 03], the short stories collected in the compelling anthology Wild East [BKL O 15 03], and now Shonk's debut collection. A fast-off-the-mark storyteller, Shonk vividly calls to life poor and anxious Muscovites and unhelpfully naive and intrusive, if well-intentioned, Americans. Her sympathetic characters are magnetic (how the reader cringes for the sweet young Russian American who tries to organize a support group for survivors of a terrorist attack), and her subject matter is fresh and urgent: the Chechen war, terrorist bombings, the tragic legacy of Chernobyl, the devaluing of art and scholarship. Although there is a touching artlessness to Shonk's tales, it endears rather than repels. These are, in fact, important stories, at once timeless and searingly of the moment, so that what they lack in polish, they more than make up for in soul. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (November 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374248478
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374248475
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,404,237 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Katherine Shonk is a fiction writer and editor who lives on the banks of Lake Michigan in Chicago. Raised in Evanston, Illinois, Shonk is the author of "The Red Passport," a collection of short stories based on her experiences living in Moscow during the mid-1990s. In spring 2010, Shonk published "Happy Now?" -- a tragicomic novel about a 30-something woman whose husband kills himself on Valentine's Day, less than two years into their marriage. Shonk's writing has appeared in Tin House and Best American Short Stories, and she works long-distance for Harvard University as an editor. Her website is www.katherineshonk.com.

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Showcase for the Craft of the Short Story, January 30, 2004
By 
Betty Codell (Chicago, Illinois USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Red Passport: Stories (Hardcover)
Bravo to Katherine Shonk--The Red Passport is a welcome and rare showcase for the classic craft of the American short story. Katherine's characters (sometimes bursting with youth and other times exhausted from life's trials) are both unique and universal. She shares an understanding of human experience and modern-day Russian that, along with her wonderful ear for language and eye for surroundings, draws her characters to life on the page. Her style is clear and captivating, each metaphor a little miracle. I look forward to more from this outstanding American author.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely and Amazing, November 18, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Red Passport: Stories (Hardcover)
The Red Passport is gem of a book. On one level, Shonk is exploring Russian and American perceptions (and misperceptions) of each other. In that respect, it makes a fascinating cultural study. The stories are precise and melancholy comedies (or tragedies) of cross-cultural manners. But the book really sticks with you for another reason: Shonk gets under her characters' skin and reveals them in all their yearning and weakness. The sentences are lucid and beautiful, yet the writing is never showy. You get to the last page and long for more. Shonk, with her generosity and restraint, is a gift to contemporary American literature. I can't think of anyone who wouldn't love this book.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Profound work!!!, November 12, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Red Passport: Stories (Hardcover)
This is a wise, sensitive, warm book which illustrates what happens when people reach out for one another across language barriers and internal barriers. Here is an author who shows the Russian people as they are, human, heartbreaking and courageous. Ms. Shonk deftly treats all her charactors and their struggles equally, so invariably both American and Russian charactors speak the same universal language of loss and hope. I have never been to Russia, but I felt instantly transported there, and saw many similarities between our peoples. So, the only prerequisite for this book is an interest in human nature. READ IT!!! You'll be happy you did!
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Olga Vasilievna, Elmira Petrovna, Grandpa Serge, Vassily Petrovich, San Francisco, Prospect Mira, New York, Aunt Masha, Larisa Mikhailovna, Lilia Teslenko, Aunt Galya, Red Square
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