
Two Novels from the Caucasus
Description
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, two friends, writers living in post-conflict regions, decided to publish their two novels in a single book under a single cover, resulting in a powerful, anti-war, literary endeavor that spans borders and transcends political divides, now available in English.
Product Details
Publisher | Academic Studies Press |
Publish Date | October 15, 2024 |
Pages | 492 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9798887195612 |
Dimensions | 8.0 X 5.0 X 1.1 inches | 1.2 pounds |
About the Author
Guram Odisharia, born in 1951, is the award-winning author of nearly thirty poetic, prose, and journalistic books, including critically acclaimed novels such as The Ocean of the Black Sea, The President's Cat, and The Cyclops Bomb. Honored with over ten national and international literary prizes, his works have been translated into over twenty languages. He currently resides in Tbilisi, Georgia.
Born in 1960, Daur Nachkebia, a physicist, has been honored with Abkhazia's Dmitry Gulia State Award for Literature, Art, and Architecture for his novel The Shore of Night, as well as the Fazil Iskander International Literary Award. The Shore of Night has been translated into Georgian, Armenian, Croatian, Serbian, Spanish, German, Italian, and Dutch, and Nachkebia's other stories can be read in Azerbaijani, English, Armenian, Georgian, and Ossetian. He is the Director of the Association of Publishing Houses in Abkhazia and currently resides in Sukhumi.
Reviews
-- Irma Ratiani, Director of TSU Shota Rustaveli Institute of Georgian Literature
"For years, Russia has been writing a chronicle of war, from Chechnya to Ukraine, and to Abkhazia in 1992, which, with Russian help, declared independence from Georgia in 1992 and remains locked in a 'frozen conflict' to this day. Now two writer friends, a historian and a physicist, have collaborated on a groundbreaking publication.
Reminiscent of Goethe's Italy, lemons bloom in the city of Sukhumi on the Black Sea, the capital of Abkhazia and the setting for this double and doubly impressive book. Once a dulcet spa town, this white city on the 'Red Riviera' is thrust into war, which tears apart palm trees and people. Despite its place at the periphery of Europe, the city is central to the Western understanding of democracy, self-determination, and peace.
With apparent, subversive ease, Guram Odisharia conveys the flair of the city, the aura of the women, the seduction of wine, and--subcutaneously and richly in anecdotes--the restrictive life under Russian control. Daur Nachkebia, on the other hand, examines the embattled city in a philosophically existentialist way; he explores the horrors and traumas of war, and grapples with questions of survival and guilt. Only love and nature offer refuge--in both novels.
The profound lightness of Odisharia, who fled to Tbilisi upon the outbreak of war, and the allegorical richness of Nachkebia, who remained in Sukhumi, depict two sides of life: the bright joy of the day and the dark melancholy of the night. This powerful joint publication is a courageous attempt to make a statement on the old divides between East and West, to find common ground between hardened ideological fronts, to reduce mistrust, and, ultimately, to reveal the best in people--in Sukhumi on the Black Sea, just opposite the coast of Ovid and the Ukraine."
-- Cornelia Zetzsche, Journalist, Publicist & Literary Critic
"The two juxtaposed novels by an Abkhazian and a Georgian writer offer a new perspective on the portrayal of the Georgian-Abkhazian war in literature, revealing both writers' beliefs in human trust and reconciliation.
'Everyone has his own relationship with God, everyone in the Bible reads his Bible, ' says Guram Odisharia's author-protagonist in The President's Cat. Searching for the 'Bible' of Mikhail Bgazhba, the novel's main character explores the mystery of a 'Sukhuminised' soul as the literary key to eternal multiethnic relationships.
'We are co-authors and we shall be jointly responsible for it, ' Odisharia continues, a writer seeking literary dialogue as an alternative to political negotiation. 'And the book will be our meeting place. And we are engaged in a conversation.'
The motif of the protagonist's 'Bible' and the crafted theory of the 'Possibility of Impossible' in The President&
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