Requiem for a Lost Empire: A Novel
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About this ebook
A young Russian army doctor is sent to distant shores to bind the wounds of those in Africa, the Near East, and South America that are pawns in the global political chess game during the Cold War. Recruited by an intelligence agent, he experiences the bloody reality of revolution on the ground. The book casts its eye back toward his grandfather Nikolai, a Red cavalry soldier fighting the Whites in 1920, and his father, whose story of World War II is invoked with a passion and force that bear comparison to the best writing on the subject.
From the battlefields of the 1920s to the harsh African heat and dust of the desert in the 1980s, from the orphanage where the narrator spent his youth to the art galleries and chic salons of the glittering new West, Requiem for a Lost Empire has all the sweep and depth, all the beauty and insight of the great Russian novels. It is, as the eminent French critic Edmonde Charles-Roux noted, "an astonishing novel, one that will surely stand the test of time."
Andreï Makine
Andreï Makine is an internationally best-selling author. He is the winner of the Goncourt Prize and the Medicis Prize, the two highest literary awards in France, for his novel Dreams of My Russian Summers, which was also a New York Times Notable Book and a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year. Makine was born in Siberia in 1957 and raised in the Soviet Union. Granted asylum in France in 1987, Makine was personally given French citizenship by President Jacques Chirac. He now lives in Paris. Arcade Publishing has published ten of Makine’s acclaimed novels in English.
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Reviews for Requiem for a Lost Empire
34 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5As far as contents, a most difficult book to read, poignant, soul-wrenching but so true to life in all respects... And I shall never think about any war (and one in particular) in the same way again. But the beauty of expression is so remarkable that it took my breath away (much as the other A.Makine's book that I've read recently - "Dreams of My Russian Summers"). The talent is unquestionable. Like a sponge, I couldn't help but absorb every single word with gratitude, and in translation, at that! - one can only imagine what a relish it would be to read it in original. Undoubtedly, I have discovered another favorite author, after reading just two of his books. Eager to read more....
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"Requiem for a Lost Empire" is, if nothing else, aptly named. It's narrated sometime in the early nineteen nineties by a Russian doctor, a veteran of various unnamed proxy wars, who was raised an orphan. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, he finds himself at loose ends: separated from his state-appointed life partner, he wanders a suddenly unfamiliar global landscape. The book is long on retrospection: the narrator relates how he learned of his family's tragic history, which was more-or-less defined by a series of twentieth-century tragedies: the Second World War, Stalin's famine and purges, and the small, messy wars that characterized the Cold War. Makine characterizes Russia's history as an almost continual tragedy, and while this isn't exactly novel, his writing gives this view real force: his depiction of war and its aftermath is astonishingly direct and excruciatingly difficult to read: it hits the reader with the force of an uppercut. Makine's plotting and construction is also masterful. Readers who insist on a certain level of realism might lose patience with him: he mostly avoids particulars, but while his use of symbolism and metaphor is easy to spot, his characters never feel like literary devices. Makine's characters have had most of their choices made for them by ideologically charged events beyond their control, but they never seem less than human. The author's focus is so personal it almost feels granular: there isn't a sentence in this book that can't be related back to its central themes. It's an impeccably controlled performance. In the end, it's this personal focus that gives me a few reservations about "Requiem for a Lost Empire." The book is, in a sense, a love story: as the narrator searches for his former partner, her absence fills the whole world. But the book might have done with a wider perspective, too: the narrator's own politics are never really clear, and I kept wanting for him to share some sort of opinion on the whole Soviet experiment. Considering that Marxist-Leninism defined his life, you'd think he'd have something to say about it as he watched it sink out of sight. The novel does draw some comparison between the Soviets' efforts to export their revolution and Western capitalist arms merchants, but this feels like something of a false equivalence and evasion, if you'll pardon the nationality-specific charge, a particularly French evasion of a pretty basic moral judgment. That objection notwithstanding, "Requiem for a Lost Empire" is melancholy, tragic, thoughtful, and beautifully written. Recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"Karlus" of the 09/19/08 review has it right. I was born in 1954. One of the earliest things I learned, as a carefree American child, was that Stalin died in 1953. As Makine's narrator travels back and forth in 20th-century time in this realistic fictional memoir, I, his new reader, correlate each identifiable moment with that time in my own life. The result for me is humility, gratitude to the Fates, and resolve to help survivors wherever I find them. Makine's language, in this translation from the French by Geoffrey Strachan, both stimulates and orders a reader's thoughts - like Bach does.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book overlays three generations of a Russian family with the the grim upheavals of Revolution, Civil War, World War II and recent Third and Fourth World mini-wars that have claimed its members from October 1917 onward. One reads of this family, which is so torn apart by the continual horrors of military service on behalf of larger ideals and adventures, together with the military destruction of their lives and homeland, that nearest relatives hardly exist -- wives, parents, children, and loves -- but instead remain alive only as the most tenuous and distant of brief memories of isolated happiness between misery and death. One reads of leaders who spring up and enslave people to their ideologies; of opportunists who seize the prevailing wind; of cynical and itinerant arms merchants who deliberately foment insurrection to sell their weapons; and of their 'Peeping Toms' who photograph the carnage of exploding and mutilated bodies to produce advertising materials for the encouragement of new buyers. No side is spared. One reads of live victims buried to their necks in standing positions with heads exposed and left to the forest animals to feed upon; and of a man who in his compassion finds enduring love by chancing upon and digging up a still-living woman who turns out to be pregnant carrying a live fetus, who become his family. One reads of the growing disillusion of the main characters as they witness and recall such vivid horrors, but one also reads with lyrical beauty of the Russian homeland as it once was for its people, and as the narrator hopes it might ever again be for him in some distant future.This is not a war story such as you have ever read. This is not history such as you have ever read. This is not a story of love and devotion such as you have ever read. This is quite simply a story that you must read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5One could note that I was reading this at the airport when my wife arrived here in the heartland. That wouldn't be true. i was holding the novel. My incessant glaring at the pages didn't yeild any comprehension. i kept staring at the pages.
Reading did ensue a few days later and I think I concluded the tome in a federal office. It is a fine example of the sidelong glance, fleeting details which sear into the brain well after the plot, as it were, has faded into the fog.