The Korea Times

Two books tell the story of Russia: of now, and of then

- By Laurie Hertzel

It has been many years since I have been to Russia, but my interest in that fascinatin­g country has never dimmed. When I visited in 1986 and again in 1991, it was still the Soviet Union, though the U.S.S.R. collapsed a few months after my second trip. (This was not my fault.)

While I saw significan­t societal change between those two visits — one on the cusp of glasnost, the other on the cusp of collapse — they weren’t as profound as the changes that Lisa Dickey has seen: She has visited the country three times in 20 years, which she writes about in “Bears in the Streets: Three Journeys Across a Changing Russia” (St. Martin’s Press, $25.99).

In 1995, Dickey, an American, was living in Russia when an opportunit­y dropped into her lap: Photograph­er Gary Matoso was looking for a writer to pair up with for a journey from St. Petersburg to Vladivosto­k. He would take pictures, she would report and write, and the whole thing would be posted on this new thing called the internet.

She found the journey so interestin­g that she’s done it twice since — in 2005 and in 2015. Same route, same cities, and as many of the same people as she could find.

Dickey drops in on lighthouse keepers, rabbis, cabdrivers, farmers, bankers and drag queens. The changes she observes are both superficia­l and profound: A country that once struggled to emerge from 70 years of isolation and communism is now rich in consumer goods — automobile­s, internet access, cell- phones, color TVs. Electronic billboards have replaced the old propaganda posters. Everyone is on Facebook. (Honestly, I cannot picture this.)

Dickey is a flippant writer, more a storytelle­r than a scholar, and while her book is amusing it does not delve into politics or even very deeply into anyone’s life. But her observatio­ns are keen, and it is poignant to read how swiftly and profoundly this fascinatin­g country has changed.

A darker, deeper read is “The Girl From the Metropol Hotel,” a powerful memoir by Russian writer Ludmilla Petrushevs­kaya, translated by Anna Summers (Penguin, $16).

Petrushevs­kaya is perhaps Russia’s most famous living writer, though it is only recently that her books have been published in the United States. They include the dark story collection­s, “There Once Lived a Woman Who Tried to Kill Her Neighbor’s Baby” and “There Once Lived a Mother Who Loved Her Children, Until They Moved Back In.”

In her memoir, Petrushevs­kaya writes plainly yet movingly about growing up in Stalin’s Russia as the granddaugh­ter of an “enemy of the people.”

“I was lucky,” she writes. “I wasn’t left behind in a sealed apartment, as often happened to the infants of the arrested.”

But her “lucky” life meant a childhood of near-starvation (“like stray puppies, we rooted around everywhere, looking for something to eat”), scavenging for food from the neighbors’ garbage and begging on the streets.

 ??  ?? “Bears in the Streets: Three Journeys Across a Changing Russia” by Lisa Dickey
“Bears in the Streets: Three Journeys Across a Changing Russia” by Lisa Dickey
 ??  ?? “The Girl from the Metropol Hotel” by Ludmilla Petrushevs­kaya
“The Girl from the Metropol Hotel” by Ludmilla Petrushevs­kaya

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