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Dream Life Of Sukhanov
 
 

Dream Life Of Sukhanov [Hardcover]

Olga Grushin
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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In Olga Grushin’s remarkably poised first novel, Anatoly Sukhanov is a fifty-six-year-old member of the Soviet nomenklatura in the pre-perestroika years of the mid-1980s. Editor of the prestigious magazine Art of the World, he enjoys all the marks of outward success-opulent apartment, chauffeured car, country dacha-not to mention a beautiful wife who’s the daughter of one of the country’s most lauded establishment artists. But his enviable lifestyle has come at a price: the abandonment of his younger artistic self. Now, it seems, that abandonment is catching up with him as he finds himself descending into a private hell of dreamlike and nightmarish visions from the very past he’s been so adept at ignoring.
That brief summary suggests a dark story, yet the genius presiding over The Dream Life of Sukhanov is Marc Chagall, he of the cows, violins and lovers flying through starry skies. Grushin studied art history at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, and the novel sometimes feels like the literary equivalent of one of Chagall’s whimsical, dreamlike paintings. Grushin manages the tricky feat of moving between dream and reality without undermining her novel’s realistic political and social setting, achieving her effects partly through language and partly through structure. She is very good, for example, at using impressionistic techniques to evoke character. In the opening paragraphs, Sukhanov sees his chauffeur purely as a function-“the pair of suede gloves on the steering wheel”-while his wife Nina is described in terms of her makeup-a “peach-colored pillar of lipstick,” a compact that is a “small convex pool of glittering blackness.”
These early scenes suggest both the opulence and the superficiality of Sukhanov’s marriage and world. But this glitter is quickly undermined. Sukhanov is attending the opening of a retrospective show in honour of the eightieth birthday of his father-in-law, the famous painter Pyotr Alekseevich Malinin, whose social-realist works Sukhanov privately despises. A painting of Nina done by her father that has always hung in Sukhanov’s study (reassuring him, though it’s a bad painting, that his choices in life have been correct) has been loaned for the show. Sukhanov knows he’s going to miss the painting; he doesn’t know that its departure foreshadows the loss of all of his cherished assumptions about his family, his work, and his status. As in a fairytale, three confrontations-with a critical young journalism student, a former friend who’s remained an impoverished artist, and a young man who seems to be a mugger but turns out to be harmless-suggest that Sukhanov’s carefully constructed life is about to come crashing down.
It’s then that Grushin does something audacious with structure. Sukhanov’s mother’s acquisition of a canary leads to a chance comment about birds-his mother tells Sukhanov he was interested in birds as a child-and as Sukhanov subsequently wanders through the neighbourhood of his childhood, he sees a flock of pigeons fluttering above a statue of Gogol. Here, as the pigeons remind Sukhanov of an earlier flight of birds, Grushin switches from a third to first-person point of view: “. . . barely reaching the sad man’s feet on the pedestal, I stand with my head tipped back-a three-year-old who has just chased a flock of pigeons and is now watching their circling flight in open-mouthed fascination.” Yet, significantly, the statue of Gogol seen by that three-year-old was a different one; the mournful appearance of that other statue was declared “misrepresent[ative of] Soviet reality” and was replaced in 1952 by a more appropriately confident Gogol. The child’s reality has been literally substituted, just as the old statue was replaced by the new, false one.
The birds’ flight is significant for another reason; the dream of flying without machines, we discover, obsessed Sukhanov’s father to the point of madness, and the father’s early disappearance left a huge void in Sukhanov’s young life. Later it’s Nina herself whom Sukhanov imagines flying when her portrait is replaced by a painting of Leda and the swan, given to them as a wedding present by their impoverished artist friend. “With a startled cry, he rushed toward her, to prevent, to stop, to catch . . . He was too late. Already, with that maddening fluid grace she possessed, she glided into the black translucence of the night, leaving behind a solitary feather fluttering slowly to the floor-and although he wanted to shout, to protest, to implore, no words came to him, none at all, and silently, knowing she would never return, he watched as she flew farther and farther away, melting amidst the cold stars above the fairy-tale city of Moscow. . . ” It’s only towards the end of the novel that Sukhanov understands his own destiny in terms of flight, realising that he’s a man who “obligingly shed his own wings and then spent decades listlessly watching ugly, atavistic stubs sprout in their stead.”
Again and again Grushin uses the device of an actual event in the present to tip Sukhanov into a vividly relived memory of a similar event in the past, while characters from the past turn up in the present and vice versa. A man claiming to be a long-lost cousin appears, although his mission seems to be, in league with Sukhanov’s colleagues at the magazine, to undermine Sukhanov’s authority, apparently on orders from high up in the Ministry of Culture. Struggling to deal with the erosion of his work life, Sukhanov also begins to realise that his cosy vision of his family is completely false. After losing his wife to what looks like permanent residence at their dacha, his corrupt and conniving son to life with Nina’s equally corrupt father, and his daughter to her married rock-star boyfriend, Sukhanov embarks on a nightmare train journey back to Moscow, a journey that forces him into a still-closer examination of his past. He discovers that he has made the same choice as the father-in-law he despises-to make those around him happy rather than pursue artistic immortality. “I was still certain of the road I myself would take if offered the choice between comfort and immortality,” he remembers thinking at age thirty, “even happiness and immortality-but did I have the right to choose it for others, for those I loved?”
Sukhanov’s journey turns out to be a redemptive one, although the final vision leaves unanswered the question as to whether Sukhanov can, after all, become the great artist that his wife and friend always believed he could be. Grushin has a tendency at times to overexplain, reiterating links and connections rather than trusting the reader’s ability to make them, and she relies too heavily on certain favourite tropes (“stars” is one of them). Yet these are quibbles. Although English is not her first language, Grushin seems surprisingly at home in it while making liberal use of the non-naturalistic techniques shared with fellow Russian writers such as Gogol and, more recently, Tatyana Tolstaya. Her magical, inventive novel has brought its author fully justified acclaim, and makes this reader’s mouth water in anticipation of her next.
Patricia Robertson (Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly

Even for a man on "the very best terms with the very best people," the Soviet Union on the eve of glasnost is a precarious place. So it goes for bitterly compelling antihero Anatoly Pavlovich Sukhanov, richly crafted in this debut novel by Russian émigré Grushin. After starting out as an avant-garde artist, Sukhanov marries the daughter of an iconic Soviet painter, becomes a critic and quickly rises to editor-in-chief of Art of the World, an influential journal devoted to disparaging the Western art that once inspired him. An enviable Moscow apartment, a dacha and a personal driver follow, but 12 years later, Sukhanov can no longer write, his wife and son know him for the sellout he is, and Gorbachev's ascension may mean the end of his sinecure. When a man claiming to be his long-lost cousin comes to visit, Sukhanov finds himself sleeping on his couch, where, as dreams of his former life haunt him, his past may catch up with him for real. Grushin, who has served as former President Carter's personal interpreter and as an editor at Harvard's Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, offers a powerful and richly detailed examination of late Soviet society's harsh confinements—even for those who have all the right connections. (Jan. 5)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Stop here, said Anatoly Pavlovich Sukhanov from the backseat, addressing the pair of suede gloves on the steering wheel. Read the first page
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5.0 out of 5 stars Your young men shall see visions, Mar 30 2011
By 
Leonard Fleisig "Len" (Washington, D.C.) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dream Life Of Sukhanov (Paperback)
And your old men shall dream dreams.

This biblical prophecy plays out with a vengeance in Olga Grushin's extraordinary first novel, "The Dream Life of Sukhanov".

"Sukhanov" has received glowing reviews in both the New York Times and on the cover of the Washington Post's Sunday Book Review. Such advance praise often leaves me with heightened expectations that almost invariably lead to disappointment. In this instance my expectations were not only met but exceeded. The book's publishers claim it is "steeped in the tradition of Gogol, Bulgakov, and Nabokov." To be sure, Grushin has not (yet) attained the mastery of a Bulgakov or Nabokov but it is no small achievement to have the comparison made with a straight face, even if one hasn't quite reached that stature. The fact that English is not Grushin's first language also calls Joseph Conrad to mind.

The protagonist of the novel is Anatoly Sukhanov, known as Tolya to his friends and family. It is 1985; Tolya is 56 and an apparatchik (a mid-level party-functionary entitled to many of the benefits of the ruling class) of the first rank. An artist in his youth, Tolya is now the editor in chief of the USSR's leading art magazine, "Art of the World." Tolya's career consists of writing articles praising `socialist realism' (paintings of heroes of labor working in factories and the like) and condemning Western art, be it cubism or surrealism and the like as decadent work of no value to a progressive society. He is seemingly content, has a nice Moscow apartment, a beautiful wife, two children, and a chauffeur to drive him to and from his job and to his dacha outside Moscow. The story opens with Tolya and his wife attending a state-sponsored birthday party for his father-in-law an artist of limited talent but high rank. It is at this party that Tolya's life begins to unravel.

Tolya runs into Lev, formerly his best friend back in the days when Tolya was still painting. This encounter sets off some long submerged memories for Tolya. Later, a casual remark by Tolya's mother serves as another pinprick that unleashes another submerged memory. In short order the floodgates have been opened and Tolya's past begins to overwhelm him. We see a childhood where Tolya's father was taken away, presumably a victim of Stalin's purges. We see Tolya develop his skills as an artist in his young adulthood, from 1957 until 1962. Those years are important because they were known in the USSR as "the Thaw", a time when Khrushchev lifted some of the strictures on Soviet art and literature. Solzhenitsyn and Yevtushenko, among others were published and the art world was abuzz with new activity. The thaw ended in 1962 and it was then that Tolya was forced to make the life choice that forms the central event of the novel.

Grushin does a tremendous job showing us Tolya's envelopment in dreams of his past. The transformation between his present (the dreams of a middle aged man) and his past (when he was a young man with the vision of an artist) evolve from jarring to seamless as Tolya descends into something approaching a hallucinatory state (It is here that the comparisons to Bulgakov become most apt.) Grushin makes a reference in the book to Dostoyevsky's story "The Double", in which a man's life is taken over by his own ghost and that synopsis sums up Tolya's current predicament.

Party functionaries such as the older Tolya are often the subject of withering scorn in Soviet fiction (Voinovich's Fur Hat comes to mind) but Grushin paints a portrait of Tolya that is both insightful and nuanced. He is not the subject of a parody but a human faced with choices in a society that did its best to make ones choices as predictable as possible. The contrast between the lives of Tolya and his old friend Lev creates a framework for the final third of the book and the final exposure of those lives is both compelling and emotionally charge. The reader cannot but help think of the choices they have made in their own lives and think about how those choices, once set in motion, become twigs and branches that when put together can change the course of the rivers of our lives.

Langston Hughes once wrote, "Hold on to dreams, for when dream go, life is like a barren field covered with snow." Grushin takes this concept and asks whether dreams, once dead, can be resurrected. It is a question that remains open long after the last page is read and the book is closed.

The Dream Life of Sukhanov is a treasure.
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Amazon U.S.: 4.5 out of 5 stars (32 customer reviews)

36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Your young men shall see visions, Jan 15 2006
By Leonard Fleisig "Len" - Published on Amazon U.S.
This review is from: Dream Life Of Sukhanov (Hardcover)
And your old men shall dream dreams.

This biblical prophecy plays out with a vengeance in Olga Grushin's extraordinary first novel, "The Dream Life of Sukhanov".

"Sukhanov" has received glowing reviews in both the New York Times and on the cover of the Washington Post's Sunday Book Review. Such advance praise often leaves me with heightened expectations that almost invariably lead to disappointment. In this instance my expectations were not only met but exceeded. The book's publishers claim it is "steeped in the tradition of Gogol, Bulgakov, and Nabokov." To be sure, Grushin has not (yet) attained the mastery of a Bulgakov or Nabokov but it is no small achievement to have the comparison made with a straight face, even if one hasn't quite reached that stature. The fact that English is not Grushin's first language also calls Joseph Conrad to mind.

The protagonist of the novel is Anatoly Sukhanov, known as Tolya to his friends and family. It is 1985; Tolya is 56 and an apparatchik (a mid-level party-functionary entitled to many of the benefits of the ruling class) of the first rank. An artist in his youth, Tolya is now the editor in chief of the USSR's leading art magazine, "Art of the World." Tolya's career consists of writing articles praising `socialist realism' (paintings of heroes of labor working in factories and the like) and condemning Western art, be it cubism or surrealism and the like as decadent work of no value to a progressive society. He is seemingly content, has a nice Moscow apartment, a beautiful wife, two children, and a chauffeur to drive him to and from his job and to his dacha outside Moscow. The story opens with Tolya and his wife attending a state-sponsored birthday party for his father-in-law an artist of limited talent but high rank. It is at this party that Tolya's life begins to unravel.

Tolya runs into Lev, formerly his best friend back in the days when Tolya was still painting. This encounter sets off some long submerged memories for Tolya. Later, a casual remark by Tolya's mother serves as another pinprick that unleashes another submerged memory. In short order the floodgates have been opened and Tolya's past begins to overwhelm him. We see a childhood where Tolya's father was taken away, presumably a victim of Stalin's purges. We see Tolya develop his skills as an artist in his young adulthood, from 1957 until 1962. Those years are important because they were known in the USSR as "the Thaw", a time when Khrushchev lifted some of the strictures on Soviet art and literature. Solzhenitsyn and Yevtushenko, among others were published and the art world was abuzz with new activity. The thaw ended in 1962 and it was then that Tolya was forced to make the life choice that forms the central event of the novel.

Grushin does a tremendous job showing us Tolya's envelopment in dreams of his past. The transformation between his present (the dreams of a middle aged man) and his past (when he was a young man with the vision of an artist) evolve from jarring to seamless as Tolya descends into something approaching a hallucinatory state (It is here that the comparisons to Bulgakov become most apt.) Grushin makes a reference in the book to Dostoyevsky's story "The Double", in which a man's life is taken over by his own ghost and that synopsis sums up Tolya's current predicament.

Party functionaries such as the older Tolya are often the subject of withering scorn in Soviet fiction (Voinovich's Fur Hat comes to mind) but Grushin paints a portrait of Tolya that is both insightful and nuanced. He is not the subject of a parody but a human faced with choices in a society that did its best to make ones choices as predictable as possible. The contrast between the lives of Tolya and his old friend Lev creates a framework for the final third of the book and the final exposure of those lives is both compelling and emotionally charge. The reader cannot but help think of the choices they have made in their own lives and think about how those choices, once set in motion, become twigs and branches that when put together can change the course of the rivers of our lives.

Langston Hughes once wrote, "Hold on to dreams, for when dream go, life is like a barren field covered with snow." Grushin takes this concept and asks whether dreams, once dead, can be resurrected. It is a question that remains open long after the last page is read and the book is closed.

The Dream Life of Sukhanov is a treasure.

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Ars Longa, Vita Brevis, April 17 2006
By G. Bestick - Published on Amazon U.S.
This review is from: Dream Life Of Sukhanov (Hardcover)
Russian emigre Olga Grushin has crafted a fine first novel about the wounds we inflict on ourselves whether we cling to our youthful dreams or turn away from them.

The setting is Moscow in the mid eighties. Fifty six year old Anatoly Sukhanov is a prominent art critic and the Editorial Director of a respected art journal. In return for being the Party's first line of defense against the decadence of western art, Sukhanov receives the perks of a mid-level party apparatchik: dacha, chauffeur, fashionable Moscow apartment. But change is blowing through the Soviet system, and it's becoming more difficult for Sukhanov to maintain his ideological footing. At home, his wife Nina seems distant and distracted. His two children have begun to unnerve him because their personalities reflect the split in his own. His son has become a cold-eyed careerist while his teenage daughter believes passionately in the transforming power of art, just as Sukhanov did back when he was a young artist of promise.

Sukhanov starts slipping into reveries about his past - the tragedy that befell his father during the Great Patriotic War, his first subversive exposure to Renaissance and modern art, his early days as a painter, when his soul burned with desire to capture what he saw in his mind. Sukhanov's passionate paintings are caught in a Khrushchev-era political crossfire, which gets him fired from his job as an art teacher. With a young family and an uncertain future in front of him, Sukhanov takes the lifeline offered by his father-in-law Malinin, a hack painter with good party connections. Sukhanov puts away his paints and becomes a successful art critic by attacking in the name of Soviet ideology the same surrealist and modernist art he revered as a painter.

The supporting characters are uniformly interesting. Sukhanov's wife Nina is both his muse and the reason he walks away from all that he values. She wants the material ease obtained by playing within the system but feels guilty over the lack of integrity this implies. Marrying the poor but talented Sukhanov was her way of rebelling against the type of life she and Sukhanov end up having. His old friend Belkin stayed true to his art and stayed poor and obscure while Sukhanov built his comfortable life. Now in his fifties, Belkin realizes that he lacks the skill and the stamina to make the final traverse from competence to mastery.

Past and present collide with increasing force in Sukhanov's mind. By the end of the novel he finally knows who he is, and how he got that way. What's in doubt is whether he'll be able to act on the knowledge. Soviet artists of Sukhanov's generation faced an impossible dilemma. If art's purpose is to serve the needs of the state, then spending your days giving form to insights mined from your subjective consciousness is inherently decadent and selfish. But it's also the process by which all art universally acknowledged as great has been created over the past several centuries. Sukhanov's tragedy is that he's talented, but not courageous enough to go where his talent takes him.

Inevitably, critics have compared Grushin to Nabokov, another Russian emigre writing novels in English. Grushin hasn't reached Nabokov's level of artistry - few have. For one thing, the book's pacing bogs down at times. Partly it's all the excursions into Sukhanov's past, partly it's the density of her descriptions. But she writes with wit, warmth and compassion, and this is a novel of many pleasures. A more apt comparison is to Anatolii Rybakov's brilliant novel of the Stalinist era, Children of the Arbat. Through the skill and particularity of their writing, Rybakov and Grushin reveal the real harm done by totalitarian governments. It's not what they do to their citizens, but what they make their citizens do to themselves.


10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't overlook this brilliant debut, Feb 17 2006
By Joseph Schneider - Published on Amazon U.S.
This review is from: Dream Life Of Sukhanov (Hardcover)
Despite having received some reviews from tough critics that are unreserved in their admiration, this thoroughly beautiful, original and deeply compassionate novel seems not to have caught the attention of many readers, and this is discouraging. I can only hope it catches on, and (possibly?) another positive review here may help get a few more copies into reader's hands. I find it hard to imagine a sympathetic reader being disappointed.
Sukhanov is certainly an "anti-hero", and his character and position, and the choices he has made, are easy to sneer at in the early pages of the book. But the reader very gradually gains a fuller and fuller understanding of the complexity of a man's life as shaped by history, family, and happenstance, and as Sukhanov's sufferings bring him self-knowledge, we are brought to an equally rich understanding. The reader and Sukhanov are gradually brought to full enlightenment at the same pace, and the final effect is deeply moving, as well as unexpectedly elating, at least to me.

As others have noted, dream, reality and potential madness are interwoven with an astonishing deftness - the reader is never lost or deliberately mystified. We are in a very concrete, sensuous world here, with a painterly precision that reflects some of the ideals of the artists in the novel. The novel is lavish in its appeal to all the senses, and recreates Moscow as well as some of the greatest novels that evoke "place" do. Grushin has said that Nabokov is an "unattainable" model, and this is apparent in the gorgeous language, and ambitious but clear structure. But she is not imitating anyone - this is an original voice.

There is much more to be said (richness of characterization, humor, insight into political realities) but I will just say that this rich and beautiful work needs more readers. An elderly artist notes near the end that it takes a lifetime to learn one's craft. Olga Grushin has gotten off to a great start with a work of full maturity, and if she grows in line with that dictum, she will write books with the strength and beauty of Sukhanov's final visions.
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see all 32 reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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