ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: University of Wisconsin Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9780299316006
RRP: £31.95
PAGES: 216
PUBLICATION DATE:
August 30, 2018
BUY THIS BOOK
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Daytime Stars
Olga Berggolts
Katharine Hodgson
Lisa Kirschenbaum
Barbara Walker
For 872 days during World War II, the city of Leningrad endured a crushing blockade at the hands of German forces. Close to one million civilians died, most from starvation. Amid the devastation, Olga Berggolts broadcast her poems on the one remaining radio station, urging listeners not to lose hope. When the siege had begun, the country had already endured decades of revolution, civil war, economic collapse, and Stalin’s purges. Berggolts herself survived the deaths of two husbands and both of her children, her own arrest, and a stillborn birth after being beaten under interrogation.Berggolts wrote her memoir Daytime Stars in the spirit of the thaw after Stalin’s death. In it, she celebrated the ideals of the revolution and the heroism of the Soviet people while also criticizing censorship of writers and recording her doubts and despair. This English translation by Lisa A. Kirschenbaum makes available a unique autobiographical work by an important author of the Soviet era. In her foreword, Katharine Hodgson comments on experiences of the Terror about which Berggolts was unable or unwilling to write.
Reviews of Daytime Stars
"A compelling work and an interesting window onto a Soviet life, extending from a childhood during the civil war to the youthful revolutionary in Petrograd/Leningrad, from the terror of the 1930s and the siege of Leningrad to the present of the text, 1953-62."–Emily Van Buskirk, author of Lydia Ginzburg's Prose "A lyrical memoir steeped in the world of the Russian/Soviet intelligentsia. Berggolts opens up to her readers the gray zones of Soviet life." –Benjamin Nathans, author of Beyond the Pale
Olga Berggolts
Lisa Kirschenbaum is professor in the Department of History at West Chester University. Barbara Walker is associate professor in the Department of English at the University of Nevada, Reno.Katharine Hodgson is senior lecturer in Russian at the University of Exeter.