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Fiction Literary

Passport to Yesterday

by (author) Yuri Druzhnikov

translated by Thomas Moore

Publisher
Peter Owen Publishers
Initial publish date
Apr 2004
Category
Literary, Cultural Heritage, Historical
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780720612189
    Publish Date
    Apr 2004
    List Price
    $27.95

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Description

A moving and ambitious novel, this story concerns an exiled Soviet musician who finds himself back in his homeland and drawn to his hometown?and the secret of his father’s disappearance during World War II. Gifted young violinist Oleg Nemets' rural life is overturned in the storm of the Second World War and the repressive regime that succeeds it. Blown far away from his home and a father who never returned from the front, Oleg lands in San Francisco as a violinist in the symphony orchestra. But years later, when the orchestra tours the Soviet Union, a series of events and clues from his past lead him back to his old town, the story of his father's disappearance and the Russia he left behind.

About the authors

Yuri Druzhnikov's profile page

Thomas Moore is an author, psychotherapist, musician and religious philosopher who lectures and writes in the areas of archetypal psychology, mythology, spiritual ecology and the arts. He consults for medical schools and hospitals. Thomas Moore has written many books and articles in the areas of archetypal and Jungian psychology, religion, mythology, relationships, and the arts. His best-sellers Care of the Soul, Soul Mates, and The Re-enchantment of Everyday Life, have inspired many around the globe. He has practiced psychotherapy for over 20 years and is a Relationships columnist for Beliefnet.com. Moore lived as a monk in a Catholic order for 12 years. He holds a Ph.D. in religious studies from Syracuse University.

Thomas Moore's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Slender, delicate and written in a voice that manages to combine plainness and poetry, horror and humour, in a quite extraordinary way."  “Literary Review

"The translator, Thomas Moore, has shortened the Russian Title from Visa to The Day Before Yesterday, and this is not our only debt of gratitude to him: he has done a good job of conveying Druzhnikov’s deceptively simple prose with its ironies and hints of unstated emotion."  “Financial Times

"These characters are more than alive. They are our relatives, members of our family, neighbours. It’s a strange, unusual, mysterious impression."  “Heinrich Böll