The Mercury News Weekend

Journalist gets Nobel award

Woman is only 3rd non-fiction writer to win in literature

- By Yuras Karmanau

MINSK, Belarus — With a reporter’s eye and an artist’s heart, Svetlana Alexievich writes of the catastroph­es, upheaval and personal woes that have afflicted the Soviet Union and the troubled countries that succeeded it. Her writings, characteri­zed by plain language and detail so visceral it’s sometimes painful to read, won her this year’s Nobel literature prize.

She is an unusual choice. The Swedish Academy, which picks the prestigiou­s literature laureates, has only twice before bestowed the award on non-fiction — to Winston Churchill and Bertrand Russell — and had never honored journalist­ic work with a Nobel.

Alexievich’s work straddles the divide. Much of her books are essentiall­y oral history, where the voice is not hers and she chooses only what to include. Her narrative passages are straightfo­rward, free of literary conceits.

“My calling as a writer involves me in talking to many people and examining many documents. Nothing is more fantastic than reality. I want to evoke a world not bound by the laws of ordinary verisimili­tude, but fashioned in my own image,” she wrote in her 1989 book “Zinky Boys,” the title a reference to zinc coffins in which the bodies of Soviet soldiers killed in Afghanista­n were shipped home.

“Her goal is to communicat­e the history of human feeling. The very fact that it transcends any easy category is part of what makes it great,” said Andrew Kaufman, a Russian literature scholar at the University of Virginia.

The 67-year-old Alexievich’s books have been published in 19 countries, with at least five of them translated into English. She also has written three plays and screenplay­s for 21 documentar­y films. She is the 14th woman to win the award since 1901.

Swedish Academy head Sara Danius praised Alexievich as a great and innovative writer who has “mapped the soul” of the Soviet and post-Soviet people.

“She transcends the format of journalism and has developed a new literary genre, which bears her trademark. That doesn’t mean there aren’t predecesso­rs — there are, absolutely — but she has taken the genre further,” Danius told The Associated Press.

Like many intellectu­als in Belarus, Alexievich supports the political opponents of authoritar­ian President Alexander Lukashenko, who is up for re-election on Sunday. Because of her criticism of the government, she has periodical­ly lived abroad — including in Italy, France, Germany and Sweden — but now lives in Minsk, the Belarusian capital.

“They don’t print my books here. I can’t speak anywhere publicly. Belarusian television never invites me,” Alexievich said. State TV made only cursory mention of her award on its nightly newscast, nine minutes into the program.

Late Thursday, Lukashenko issued a brief statement of congratula­tion to Alexievich, saying “I am truly happy for your success. I hope your award will serve our state and the Belarusian people.”

Yaraslau Kryvoi, secretary of the Anglo-Belarusian Society, said the award means “Belarus is now on the political map of the world.”

Lukashenko has shown signs that he’s trying to improve relations with the West and resist Russia’s presumed interest in absorbing Belarus. The Swedish Academy says it makes its choices only on literary merit and doesn’t consider politics.

Alexievich’s first book, “War’s Unwomanly Face,” published in 1985, was based on the previously untold stories of women who had fought against Nazi Germany. It sold more than 2 million copies.

Alexievich said she was at home ironing when she received the call Thursday from the academy with news that filled her both with joy and trepidatio­n.

“How am I going to keep this up?” she asked rhetorical­ly.

Speaking to Swedish broadcaste­r SVT, Alexievich said winning the award left her with “complicate­d” emotions.

“It immediatel­y evokes such great names as (Ivan) Bunin, (Boris) Pasternak,” she said, referring to Russian writers who have won the Nobel Prize for literature. “On the one hand, it’s such a fantastic feeling. But it’s also a bit disturbing.”

She said the 8 million Swedish kronor (about $960,000) in Nobel prize money will allow her to write more.

“I do only one thing: I buy freedom for myself. It takes me a long time to write my books, from five to 10 years,” she said. “I have two ideas for new books, so I’m pleased that I will now have the freedom to work on them.”

Alexievich was born on May 31, 1948, in the western Ukrainian town of Ivano-Frankivsk to a Belarusian father and a Ukrainian mother. Both parents worked as teachers.

 ?? SERGEI GRITS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Belarusian journalist and writer Svetlana Alexievich, the 2015 Nobel literature winner, center, is surrounded after her news conference in Minsk, Belarus on Thursday.
SERGEI GRITS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Belarusian journalist and writer Svetlana Alexievich, the 2015 Nobel literature winner, center, is surrounded after her news conference in Minsk, Belarus on Thursday.

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