Pavel Sanaev - "Bury Me Behind the Baseboard"
| Condition | Used, in good condition |
| Language | Latvian |
| Added | February 24, 21:3336 |
The autobiographical work "Bury Me Behind the Baseboard" by screenwriter, director, and translator Pavel Sanaev is one of the brightest contemporary Russian novels. In 2003, the book literally exploded onto the market and immediately gained cult status, also being nominated for the Booker Prize. It is the story of an eight-year-old boy Sasha, who lives with his grandmother and grandfather for a few years because his mother has embarked on a new relationship with the boy's stepfather. The documentary nature of the book and the fact that its main characters are popular actors in Russia and the former Soviet Union (the author's grandfather is Vsevolod Sanaev, mother is Elena Sanaeva, stepfather is Rolan Bykov) still puzzles the audience—some readers are thrilled by the author's courage to reveal such personal scenes of memory, while others feel shocked by this openness and believe the author wanted to take revenge on his grandmother. In 2014, the online magazine "Satori" included this book in the selection of the ten best Russian books of the past five years, recognizing that the main peculiarity of the book lies in the language that creates the atmosphere of the boy Sasha Savelyev's memories. However, the book is as much about generalized Soviet childhood as it is about a child's perception of life, which seeks to rationalize any experience. Although the events are sometimes dramatic, the main character views life contemplatively and with bright humor.