Letters to Another Room

Letters to Another Room

by John Farndon (Translator), John Farndon (Translator), Ravil Bukharaev (Author), with Olga Nakston (Translator)

Synopsis

This is a beautiful translation by John Farndon (with Olga Nakston) of the late Ravil Bukharaev's literary existential masterpiece that seeks to reconcile his Muslim faith with the pursuit of his ideals and his search of self and understanding of life, particularly his notions of 'authenticity' which although conflicted by it as a person and human being, it is what framed his world view. Throughout their long marriage, the poets Ravil Bukharaev and Lydia Grigorieva have written in separate rooms in their home. In this deeply felt and poetic memoir, Ravil writes to Lydia to explain at last things left unsaid in their great love for each other. With immense honesty and insight, he explores how their journey together has been shaped by his profound Muslim beliefs and his lifelong search for what is authentic and true. Along the way, he creates beautiful and moving vignettes of eight very different people struggling to find meaning in their life, from old Elizaveta Osipovna, alone in her Moscow flat, to proud Arzhana coping with a tough life in the Altai mountains. The honesty and transparency informing this epistolary novel-essay is at times both stunning and stupendous. In the author's own words, here is 'an attempt by a man to have it out with his loved one, which is all the more difficult in view of the most vital and crucial condition of such an exchange - complete and total sincerity'. Ravil Bukharaev was a celebrated writer, poet and scholar of religious, cultural and political history of his native Tatarstan and author of over thirty books.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 278
Edition: New
Publisher: Renaissance Books
Published: 13 Jun 2013

ISBN 10: 1898823049
ISBN 13: 9781898823049

Media Reviews
'Ravil Bukharaev carries the flame of the finest Russian prose - of Pushkin, Turgenev, Bunin. His classical clarity, his perfect balance of phrase and thought and the unhurried and magnanimous flow of his narration are wonderfully rendered from Russian by John Farndon's English translation. Letters to Another Room is an everlasting dialogue between the author and his characters, between the writer and his readers, between the narrator and his translator - a broad and true dialogue that bridges cultures and epochs.' HAMID ISMAILOV Author of The Railway and A Poet and Bin-Laden ' - This writing [by Ravil Bukharaev] is at the limits of the Russian language as it was with Nabokov and Brodsky; it is constant listening, constant awareness a la Proust of the self, continuous attention towards every infinitesimal facet of Life; relentless chasing of the soul, perpetual astonishment of the fact that one exists, that the world is created for you - you only have to understand it and fall in love with it, and it will reveal itself. And every word runs and hurries, hastens - as if it is a kind of music, or a kind of Arachna's web - It seems to be already a form of writing beyond Speech, some precious Islamic pattern, a dazzling calligraphy, an ornament circumventing the entire world - '
Author Bio
RAVIL BUKHARAEV (1951-2012) who came to live in London in 1992 with his wife - artist and writer- Lydia Grigorieva, was a distinguished writer, poet and scholar of religious, cultural and political history of his native Tatarstan, and was fluent in nine languages. Born in Kazan, on the river Volga to a family of mathematicians, his literary output was prodigious, authoring more than thirty books in both Russian and English, including Islam in Russia: The Four Seasons (Curzon Press, London, and St. Martin's Press, New York), 2000, Tatarstan: A Can-Do Culture (Global Oriental 2007) and The Story of Joseph (Global Oriental/Brill, 2010). In 2005, he was awarded the M. Lomonosov Gold Medal for his contribution to Russian Arts, Science and Education, and in 2006, he was awarded the State Prize of Tatarstan for his most recent books of poetry.