Letters to Another Room
Title
Letters to Another Room
Price
€ 39,99
ISBN
9781898823360
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
286
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
14.6 x 22.4 x 3.5 cm
Discipline
Asian Studies
Also available as
Hardback - € 39,95
Table of Contents
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1 Ten Minutes of Solitude
2 The Gout Flower
3 The Ghost of the Bird-cherry Tree
The Month of Little Heat
4 The Escape and Twenty Years of Non-existnce
On to the Other Side
5 ‘Not Always Flying…’
Chestnut near Karlovy Bridge
6 A Prayer in Beech Forests
About the Fishing Rod
7 The Dorothean Fields
Stairway to Heaven
8 Who Cries
The Secret Lily of the Valley
9 Postscript

Reviews and Features

‘…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 à 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…’ VALENTIN KURBATOV Literary critic and Secretary of the Board of the Russian Union of Writers

Ravil Bukharaev

Letters to Another Room

This is a beautiful translation by John Farndon (with Olga Nakston) of the late Ravil Bukharaev’s literary existential novel memoir in which he explains to his wife how his Muslim faith and ideals influenced both his love for her and his understanding of life and self, particularly his quest for truth and ‘authenticity’. Throughout their long marriage, the writers and poets Ravil Bukharaev and Lydia Grigorieva had written in separate rooms in their home. In this deeply-felt and poetic memoir, Ravil writes to Lydia in order to try explain (at last) things left unsaid over the years. 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 finely defined and moving vignettes of eight very different people struggling to find meaning in their lives, from old Elizaveta Osipovna, alone in her Moscow flat, to proud Arzhana coping with a tough life in the Altai mountains.
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Author

Ravil Bukharaev

Ravil Bukharaev (1951-2012) was a celebrated Tatar writer, poet and scholar of religious, cultural and political history of his native Tatarstan and author of over thirty books. Born in Kazan, the capital, in 1992 he left Russia and moved to London with his artist/poet wife Lydia Grigorieva in 1992 and subsequently joined the BBC World Service. Latterly, following early retirement, he committed himself to supporting a number of UNESCO projects.