Book Description
"Vladimir Girshkin—twenty-five-year-old Russian immigrant, 'Little Failure' according to his high-achieving mother, unhappy lover to fat dungeon mistress Challah (his 'little Challah bread'), and lowly clerk at the bureaucratic Emma Lazarus Immigrant Absorption Society—is about to have his first break. When the unlikely figure of a wealthy but psychotic old Russian war hero appears and introduces Vladimir to his best friend, who just happens to be a small electric fan, Vladimir has little inkling that he is about to embark on an adventure of unrelenting lunacy—one that overturns his assumptions about what it means to be an immigrant in America." The Russian Debutante's Handbook takes us from New York City's Lower East Side to the hip frontier wilderness of Prava—the Eastern European Paris of the '90s—whose grand and glorious beauty is marred only by the shadow of the looming statue of Stalin's foot. There, with the encouragement of the Groundhog, a murderous (but fun-loving) Russian mafioso, Vladimir infiltrates the American ex-pat community with the hope of defrauding his young middle-class compatriots by launching a pyramid scheme that's as stupid as it is brilliant. Things go swimmingly at first, but nothing is quite as it seems in Prava, and Vladimir learns that in order to reinvent himself, he must first discover who he really is.
Vladimir Girshkin, a likeable Russian immigrant, searches for love, a decent job, and a credible self-identity in Gary Shteyngart's debut novel, The Russian Debutante's Handbook. With a doctor-father of questionable ethics and a manic, banker mother, Vladimir avoids his suburban parents and their desire that he pursue the almighty dollar as proof of success. Vladimir gets by as an immigration clerk, eking out a living in a cruddy New York City apartment while accumulating an array of quirky acquaintances, from a wealthy but disheveled old man who claims his electric fan speaks to him desperate for citizenship to Challa, a portly S/M queen. As a love interest, Challa is replaced by Francesca, a graduate student whose friends welcome Vladimir for the status he brings their bohemian clique, and whose parents encourage them to shack up, she lives at home as visible proof she can maintain a steady relationship. The Russian Debutante's Handbook is a quirky amalgam of dead-on American absurdities, albeit with somewhat stereotypical characters. While Vladimir flounders with how to improve his state, he becomes an expatriate in a trendy European city, becomes somewhat of a mobster himself, and generally has a good time. While many of the central characters remain elusively thin, Vladimir is a delight, and Shteyngart's wit is merciless: Russian women wear "wedding cakes of blond hair" and graduate students lounge in a bar "as if waiting for funding to appear.
" Reminiscent of Gogol and other Russian satirists, The Russian Debutante's Handbook is a genuine, sublime social commentary. --Michael Ferch
"This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. "Rowdy, ribald, funny...this superb debut [is] the real thing."—Esquire
"As attuned to the exhilarating possibilities of the language as Martin Amis, as deadpan and funny as the young Evelyn Waugh."—Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
"In Vladimir Girshkin, the wisecracking, lovelorn, desperately self-reinventing protagonist, Shteyngart has given us a literary symbol for this new immigrant age, much as Saul Bellow or Henry Roth did in theirs..."—Chris Lehmann, The Washington Post
"A brilliant, funny debut describing the vicissitudes of immigration today, as experienced by the hero, a young Russian-American."—Harper's Bazaar
"The rampaging narrative is festooned on every page with glittering one-liners, improbably apt similes, and other miniature pleasures."—Elle
"If Henry Miller were Russian, this is a book he might have written."—Time Out New York
"[Gary Shteyngart's] sense of the exploded past and volatile present suffuses this gifted first novel..." —O. Magazine
About the Author
Gary Shteyngart was born in Leningrad in 1972, and came to the United States seven years later. His novel, The Russian Debutante's Handbook, won the Stephen Crane Award for First Fiction, was named a New York Times Notable Book, and was chosen as a best book of the year by the Washington Post Book World and Entertainment Weekly. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, Granta, and many other publications. He lives in New York City.
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坦白说,我一开始对这种带有特定“手册”性质的书名持保留态度,担心会流于刻板或说教,但事实证明我的担忧完全是多余的。这部作品的魔力在于它的“非指导性”——它并非一本教你如何融入上流社会的实用指南,而更像是一面多棱镜,折射出不同个体在特定社会结构下的生存策略和心理变化。叙事者的高明之处在于,他/她没有直接评判任何角色的行为,而是将他们置于特定的道德困境中,让读者自己去权衡利弊。情节的推进充满了意想不到的转折,特别是涉及到财产继承和政治联姻的部分,紧张感十足,让人几乎是屏息凝神地想要知道下一步会发生什么。语言风格是其一大亮点,时而华丽庄重,充满古典文学的韵味,时而又变得尖锐辛辣,带着一丝讽刺的幽默感,这种风格的切换自然流畅,完美地贴合了故事的起伏跌宕。这是一部需要细细品味的佳作,初读可能只觉华美,再读才能体会其深刻。
评分这本小说简直是一场视觉和情感的盛宴,作者的笔触细腻入微,仿佛能感受到十九世纪末圣彼得堡的凛冽寒风和那些贵族家庭内部错综复杂的人际关系。叙事节奏张弛有度,时而如同一场华丽的宫廷舞会,灯火辉煌,衣香鬓影,每一个眼神的交汇都暗藏玄机;时而又转入阴冷的角落,揭示着那些光鲜外表下隐藏的家族秘密和个人挣扎。我特别欣赏作者对时代背景的考究,从服饰的描述到沙龙里的谈吐,都充满了历史的厚重感,让人仿佛真的穿越回了那个动荡又充满魅力的俄国。书中的人物塑造极为立体,即便是配角,也拥有鲜明的个性和复杂的动机,他们的选择常常让人唏嘘不已,为那个时代女性命运的局限性感到深深的惋惜。读完后,那种久久不能散去的惆怅和对美好事物逝去的感怀,证明了这是一部真正触动人心的作品,不仅仅是关于一个“新手”的入门指南,更是一部关于生存、选择与身份认同的宏大叙事。
评分我通常不太容易被历史背景浓厚的小说吸引,但这本书成功地打破了我的固有印象。它没有沉溺于历史的枝枝节节,而是巧妙地将历史作为人物命运的催化剂。与其说这是一个关于初入社会的年轻人的故事,不如说是一出关于权力和脆弱性之间永恒博弈的戏剧。书中对情感的描绘极其克制而有力,尤其是那些未说出口的爱恋和压抑的欲望,通过环境的渲染和人物细微的肢体语言表达出来,这种“留白”的艺术处理,比直白的抒情更具感染力。我非常喜欢作者对“规则”的探讨——那些看不见的、世代相传的社会契约如何塑造了个人的自由意志。每一次舞会的场景都如同精心编排的芭蕾,每一步都精确地衡量着社交资本的得失。这本书的魅力就在于,它让你在享受一场精美绝伦的时代风情画的同时,也在思考人性的普遍命题。
评分这部作品的叙事视角非常独特,它不是一个简单的旁观者视角,而更像是一个参与其中、又保持着审慎距离的智者在缓缓道来。它成功地构建了一个自洽的、令人信服的微观宇宙。让我印象深刻的是作者对“身份”这个概念的解构——“新手”如何通过学习和扮演来构建自己的社会身份,以及当这个身份受到外部冲击时,内在的自我又是如何应对的。书中的对白犀利而优雅,充满了那个特定阶层特有的那种“心照不宣”的默契,但也正是这些对话,一步步将人物推向不可逆转的境地。整本书读下来,我感受到一种强大的宿命感,但这种宿命感并非消极的,它反而凸显了人物在有限选择中做出抉择的勇气。我强烈推荐给任何对人物心理深度和时代背景描绘有要求的读者,它提供的远超一个简单的故事,而是一次深刻的文化体验。
评分这部小说的结构组织得极为精巧,如同一个年代久远的、装饰繁复的八音盒,每一个齿轮的转动都精准地对应着情节的推进。它成功地捕捉到了一种“黄金时代的黄昏”的氛围,那种即将到来的变革前的宁静与不安交织在一起。我尤其被作者对于女性角色内心世界的剖析所震撼,她们在维护家族荣誉和追求个人幸福之间的撕扯,那种无声的抗争,读来令人心痛。作者运用了大量的象征手法,比如特定的天气、特定的房间布局,都映射着角色的内心状态或命运转折点,这种文学技巧的运用非常成熟,绝非新手之作可比。阅读体验是层次分明的,第一次读是感受故事的浪漫与冲突,第二次读则会开始留意那些隐藏在对话背后的潜台词和作者埋下的伏笔。绝对是一部值得反复研读的经典之作。
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