![]() ![]() Awaiting execution, they’re summoned by the secret police: Colonel Grechko’s daughter is getting married, and eggs are needed for the cake. Lev, an intelligent, awkward, eternally self-doubting Jewish teenager, and Kolya, a Slavic Adonis, have been imprisoned after wartime infractions. Happily, Benioff’s prose doesn’t draw that kind of attention to itself. For some writers, Russia inspires extravagant lamentations uttered into the eternity of those implacable winters. And after that first chapter Benioff is humble enough to get out of its way. In fact, the novel tells a refreshingly traditional tale, driven by an often ingenious plot. Before Lev begins to tell his story, however, a young Los Angeles screenwriter named David visits his grandfather in Florida, pleading for his memories of the siege. ![]() “City of Thieves” follows a character named Lev Beniov, the son of a revered Soviet Jewish poet who was “disappeared” in the Stalinist purges, as Lev and an accomplice carry out an impossible assignment during the Nazi blockade of Leningrad. See what I mean?īenioff’s new novel reveals why there are so many Russians - not oligarchs or prostitutes, but soldiers and old babushkas - in this nice American boy’s fiction. (They should just get it over with and put the man in the movies already.) He takes his morning orange juice next to Amanda Peet. He’s already written a pair of unputdownable books, one of which was made into Spike Lee’s most heartbreaking film, “The 25th Hour” - for which Benioff was asked to write the screenplay, leading to a second career in Hollywood. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |