Man Who Couldn't Die

The Tale of an Authentic Human Being

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Marian Schwartz, Olga Slavnikova: Man Who Couldn't Die (2019, Columbia University Press)

188 pages

English language

Published Dec. 19, 2019 by Columbia University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-231-54641-6
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The Man Who Couldn’t Die: The Tale of an Authentic Human Being is not a casual reading. It is a deeply introspective and slow to grasp book, and as such it is not for everyone. But a meticulous reader will discover that it is a book that worth the time and the effort.

It is early 1990s and a time of high uncertainty. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the accompanying economic upheaval, triggered a national identity crisis, confusion and disorientation. People had the feeling that the world was collapsing around them. Survival, especially for those who had a bleak job situation and "no marketable skills" depended on making new adjustments; sometimes people had to balance between being flexible and staying true to whatever your personal convictions are; sometimes they had to make a hard choice between the two.

Olga Slavnikova tells the story of two women, wife and …

Subjects

  • Soviet union, fiction
  • Short stories