Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Tue, 11/09/2010 - 9:27pm
11/23/2010 7:00 pm
11/23/2010 8:00 pm
Tuesday, November 23rd at 7pm
In Travels in Siberia, Ian Frazier trains his eye for
unforgettable detail on Siberia, that vast expanse of Asiatic Russia. He
explores many aspects of this storied, often grim region, which takes
up one-seventh of the land on earth. He writes about the geography, the
resources, the native peoples, the history, the forty-below midwinter
afternoons, the bugs.
The book brims with Mongols, half-crazed Orthodox archpriests, fur
seekers, ambassadors of the czar bound for Peking, tea caravans, German
scientists, American prospectors, intrepid English nurses, and prisoners
and exiles of every kind—from Natalie Lopukhin, banished by the czarina
for copying her dresses; to the noble Decembrist revolutionaries of the
1820s; to the young men and women of the People’s Will movement whose
fondest hope was to blow up the czar; to those who met still-ungraspable
suffering and death in the Siberian camps during Soviet times.
More than just a historical travelogue, Travels in Siberia is
also an account of Russia since the end of the Soviet Union and a
personal reflection on the all-around amazingness of Russia, a country
that still somehow manages to be funny. Siberian travel books have been
popular since the thirteenth century, when monks sent by the pope went
east to find the Great Khan and wrote about their journeys. Travels in Siberia will take its place as the twenty-first century’s indispensable contribution to the genre.
Ian Frazier is the author of Great Plains, The Fish’s Eye, On the Rez, and Family, as well as Coyote v. Acme and Dating Your Mom, all published by FSG. A frequent contributor to The New Yorker, he lives in Montclair, New Jersey.