Reviews for Limonov

by Emmanuel Carr re ; translated by John Lambert

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The life of a controversial Russian writer and adventurer.Journalist, novelist, screenwriter and director Carrre (My Life as a Russian Novel, 2010, etc.) was amazed when he heard some of Russias liberal intellectuals warmly praise Edward Limonov (b. 1943), infamous for his right-wing views and incendiary fascist remarks. That paradox inspired the investigation that resulted in this book, winner of the Prix Renaudot when it was published in France in 2011. Combining biography, political history and memoir, Carrre places Limonovs romantic, dangerous life in the context of what he calls his own bourgeois bohemian experiences. Limonov, a Russian Jack London, has been wildly impetuous: A rebel, thug and poet, he left his native Ukraine when he was 24; moved to Moscow, where he eked out a living sewing pants; married a beautiful model with whom, in 1974, he immigrated to New York, imagining a radiant future as a writer. Despondent after his wife left him, he became a homeless tramp; then, in a sharp twist of fate, he got a job as butler to a multimillionaire, through whom he met a literary agent who placed his first bookautobiographical fictionwith a French publisher. Paris was next, where the literati treated him like a bit of a star. But he was restless. Learning of conflict in the Balkans, he decided to fight with the Serbs. When Carrre interviewed him in Moscow in 2007, he was leading a national assembly of opposition forces. Limonov has been opposed to political leaders (most recently, cold and cunning Putin), to the adulation bestowed upon such writers as Joseph Brodsky, Pasternak and Yevtushenko, and to glasnost, which led his countrymen to believe that they had been duped by a gang of criminals. Limonov prefers his Russia powerful and morose.A searching portrait of an arrogant, heroic and willful mana mix of Jean Genet, Don Quixote and King Lear. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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