The rooster house A Ukrainian family story

Victoria Belim

Book - 2023

"A timely and deeply moving memoir of the author's Ukrainian family history, interwoven with the country's tumultuous story. In 2014, the landmarks of Victoria Belim's personal geography were plunged into tumult at the hands of Russia. Her hometown Kyiv was gripped by protests and violent suppression. Crimea, where she'd once been sent to school to avoid radiation from the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl, was invaded. Kharkiv, where her grandmother Valentina studied economics and fell in love; Donetsk, where her father once worked; and Mariupol, where she and her mother bought a cherry tree for Valentina's garden all became battlegrounds. A naturalized American citizen then living in Brussels, Belim felt she had ...to go back. She had to spend time with her aging grandmother and her cousin Dima. She had to unravel a family mystery spanning several generations. And she needed to understand how her country's tragic history of communist revolution, civil war, famine, world war, totalitarianism, and fraught independence had changed the course of their lives. The Rooster House is a beautifully written memoir of a family, a country's past, and its dangerous present. It is about parents and children, true believers and victims, gardens and art, secrets and tragedy. Compulsively readable, deeply moving, and at times laugh-out-loud funny, it is a stunning debut book by an experienced, expressive, and gifted writer"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Belim, Victoria
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
History
Published
New York : Abrams Press 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Victoria Belim (author)
Physical Description
xiv, 286 pages : genealogical table, map ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781419767852
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Ukrainian American journalist recounts the history of her Ukrainian family within the broader context of Russian aggression since the 1930s. "I was born in Kyiv, but the first fifteen summers of my life unfolded in [Bereh] on the Vorksla River." So writes Brussels-based journalist Belim in this poignant, gently unfolding tale. To her, the small village of Bereh was a "second home," and her great-grandparents Asya and Sergiy were her "second set of parents." Although she grew up in Chicago with her mother and stepfather, Belim pined for Bereh, yet she rarely visited--until 2014, when Russia seized Crimea and war broke out. Spurred by the rabid pro-Soviet stance of her uncle Vladimir, her father's older brother, who goaded her with anti-Western propaganda, the author decided she needed to return to the Ukraine of her youth and reconnect with her aging grandmother Valentina, who lived in Kyiv but spent her summers in Bereh. The author writes movingly about helping Valentina with her cherry orchard and extensive garden and cooking traditional Ukrainian meals while weaving in painful memories of Soviet oppression--her relatives' surviving the Holodomor of 1932-1933, when 4 million Ukrainian peasants died due to Stalin's disastrous collectivization policy. Belim also writes about how, during the political purge of 1937, her uncle Nikodim inexplicably disappeared after being interrogated at the secret Soviet police headquarters called the Rooster House. "I thought of this uncle who had fought for a free Ukraine and who had paid the highest price as a kindred spirit," she writes, "and I wanted to restore him to his rightful place in the family story." While Valentina refused to revisit this haunting history, Belim was able to access Nikodim's files and discover the truth. Throughout this powerful text, readers will encounter numerous satisfying layers. An elegant family narrative of myriad characters traumatized by the deep-seated Russia-Ukrainian struggle. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.