Nine Rabbits

(Author) (Translator)
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Product Details
Price
$14.00  $13.02
Publisher
Catapult
Publish Date
Pages
184
Dimensions
5.4 X 8.2 X 0.8 inches | 0.6 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781936787135

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About the Author
Virginia Zaharieva was born in Sofia in 1959. She is a writer, psychotherapist, feminist, and mother. Her novel Nine Rabbits is among the most celebrated Bulgarian books to appear over the past two decades and the first of Zaharieva's work made available in North America.

Angela Rodel earned a BA from Yale University and a MA from UCLA, both in linguistics. She won a Fulbright fellowship to study Bulgarian at Sofia University in 1996 and returned to Bulgaria on a Fulbright-Hays Fellowship in 2004 where she still resides and works as a literary translator of note. Rodel won a PEN Translation Fund Grant from the American PEN Foundation for Holy Light, a collection of stories by Georgi Tenev--the first time a Bulgarian work has received this award. Her translations of Milen Rouskov's novel Thrown into Nature, Zachary Karabashliev's 18% Gray, and Angel Igov's A Short Tale of Shame are published by Open Letter Books.
Reviews
"Zaharieva packs several genres into one, including but not limited to pastoral idyll, sexual coming-of-age story, and feminist memoir. Ultimately, she presents life in all its messiness and possibility, vivid enough for the reader to almost taste."--Publishers Weekly

"Each chapter--usually just two to four pages and often ending with a recipe or two--centers around a theme, which might be abstract, concrete, or metaphorical. Usually some event has generated an idea, which is then teased open. The recipes--an eclectic mix of mostly East European dishes with natural, fresh ingredients--sound delicious, and they may also have the purpose of grounding the writer and the writing. It is as though she were saying that we need our connection to the physical world, and food best serves that purpose... This is powerful, controlled writing."--Rain Taxi

"Characters are portrayed in a stark light exposing their neediness, their unflattering traits, and, as the novel progresses, their hard-fought wisdom. . . It's rare for me to recommend a novel on the strength of its wisdom, but time and again I found myself nodding appreciably as Manda moves towards a uniquely feminine Zen understanding of herself."--Heavy Feather Review

"A remarkable, untraditional novel about a universal story: one woman's quest to create--and maintain--her own identity... Told through a series of beautifully written short chapters, Nine Rabbits is a moving tale of one woman's struggle to identify not as one part of herself, but as a whole, complex being. While the novel certainly addresses some heavy topics, Zaharieva moves through each scene with the ease of an old friend sharing stories over a long, boozy dinner, making Nine Rabbits read more like a memoir than a novel, and making Manda seem less like a character and more like the fully-realized woman she strives to be."--Cedar Rapids Gazette

"I know of few books that explore the workings of psychological and cultural legacies as fearlessly... The boldness of Nine Rabbits is expressed in its narrative virtuosity as well, for it blends memoir, recipes, alternative endings, references to popular Western culture, koans, dreams, diary entries and verse."--Rob Neufeld, The Asheville Citizen-Times

"One moment there is past-tense prose and the next we meet the startling present in poetry, stream-of-consciousness, and the most well-timed recipes ever to grace a novel. Zaharieva's prose reads like a reverie and translator Angela Rodel maintains authenticity with her mastery of slang equivalents, partly responsible for the total lack of boundaries between page and reader. We are under the waves with Manda, from beginning to end, unable to separate ourselves from her clear, brutal vision of the 'Great Experiment' of her life."--Curbside Splendor

"Lyrical and magical...Filled with nostalgia, [the novel's] recipes beg to be made. Eccentric instructions and all."--Pop-Break