Regina Leader-Post

Terrible Country a wonderful novel

- ANN LEVIN

With the U.S. in an uproar about Russian meddling in its election, it’s a good time to brush up on the country’s former Cold

War enemy. Here to help is Russian-born emigre Keith Gessen, whose hilarious, heartbreak­ing novel A Terrible Country may be one of the best books you’ll read this year.

The novel is narrated by 33-year-old Andrei — who, like the author, is a Soviet Jew who moved to the U.S. at age six — and it recounts the year he spent in Moscow taking care of his aging grandmothe­r.

He moved back on the eve of the 2008 financial meltdown at the behest of his businessma­n brother, Dima, who had to flee the country suddenly after getting on the wrong side of the oligarchs. Andrei is initially put out by Dima’s request, but after a failed relationsh­ip, he’s not unhappy to leave New York.

Unbeknowns­t to Andrei, Baba Seva has dementia and is hard of hearing.

And since Dima has already sublet his apartment, Andrei has to move into their old bedroom. Oh, the humiliatio­n!

One of the pleasures of the novel is listening to Andrei’s hyper-intelligen­t, wry and ironic voice. At times he can be petty and arrogant, self-righteous and ingratiati­ng, not to mention slightly clueless about women.

But basically Andrei is a good guy who feels guilty when he gets impatient with his grandmothe­r and offers up incisive, politicall­y charged commentary on the sweeping changes underway in Putin’s Russia.

Andrei’s grandmothe­r is an indomitabl­e force of nature. Gessen’s portrait of her is tender, and readers will be hard pressed to find a more nuanced and poignant depiction of what it means to lose your memory.

Indeed, Baba Seva is the one who lends the novel its title. Early on, she can’t remember who Andrei is or why he’s in Moscow. When he reminds her, she gets upset. “This is a terrible country,” she says to him. “My (daughter) took you to America. Why did you come back?”

Gessen’s genius is in showing us how and why Russia is and isn’t a terrible country. And how, in its ruthless devotion to market capitalism, the former socialist state bears a striking resemblanc­e to our own.

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