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Panic in a Suitcase

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A dazzling debut novel about a immigrant family living in Brooklyn and their struggle to learn the new rules of the American Dream

In this tale of two decades in the life of an immigrant household, the experience of a single family artfully reflects the fall of Communism and the rise of globalization. Ironies, subtle and glaring, are revealed: the Nasmertovs left Odessa for Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, with a huge sense of finality, only to find that the divide between the old world and the new is not nearly as clear-cut as they thought. The dissolution of the Soviet Union makes returning just a matter of a plane ticket, and the Russian-owned shops in their adopted neighborhood stock even the most obscure comforts of home. Pursuing the American Dream once meant giving up everything, but does the dream still work if the past is always within reach?

If the Nasmertov parents can afford only to look forward, learning the rules of aspiration, the family's youngest, Frida, can only look back.

In striking, arresting prose loaded with fresh and inventive turns of phrase, Yelena Akhtiorskaya has written the first great novel of Brighton Beach: a searing portrait of hope and ambition and a profound exploration of the power and limits of language itself and its ability to make connections across cultures and generations.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Stefan Rudnicki takes listeners into the midst of the wonderful, funny, crazy characters in this debut novel. The Nasmertov family leaves Odessa in 1991 for Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, looking for their share of the American dream. After two years, they've have made a life for themselves among Brooklyn's Ukrainian Jews. Rudnicki colors their stories with all the dark humor, varied emotion, and bittersweet tones of a melancholy violin. From Robert and Esther, respected doctors back in Odessa, to Pasha, their poet son who has remained in the old country, the novel is less about the current crisis in Ukraine and more about the universal experience of immigrants everywhere. Rudnicki offers perfect pronunciations of Yiddish expressions, and his superb performance removes all distance between listener and characters. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 12, 2014
      The Ukrainian Jewish family featured in this hilarious debut leaves Odessa for Brooklyn in 1991. They include renowned doctor Robert Nasmertov; his daughter, Marina; who finds work cleaning houses for wealthy American Jews; and her nine-year-old daughter, Frida. However, Robert’s son, Pasha, a brilliant poet but a totally incapable human being, never emigrates, visiting his family only occasionally. In 2008, the adult Frida goes to see him and discovers that he has become “more alienated and excluded in his native city than his family in their new land.” Akhtiorskaya’s take on how family members manipulate and fail each other is spot-on, with Pasha and Frida both disappointing their family in different ways: he converts to Christianity; she begins medical school but drops out. The prose is finely crafted, but this is not a tale of relatable people. Instead, Akhtiorskaya excels at humorous, slightly overstated character sketches, making each person uniquely absurd. Agent: Jim Rutman, Sterling Lord Literistic.

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  • English

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