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Paperback Your Mouth Is Lovely Book

ISBN: 0060096780

ISBN13: 9780060096786

Your Mouth Is Lovely

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"Each winter I'm sure will be my last. Dust to dust, I find myself saying as my frozen fingers struggle tohold the pen with which I write these words to you, Ashes toashes, I mutter, and nothing but... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Your Prose Is Lovely

Your Mouth is Lovely follows the story of Miriam, a young disenfranchised woman who comes of age at the time of the Russian Revolution of 1905. It's a heady time, when the superstitions of traditional Jews of the Russian shtetls are beginning to clash head on with the political leanings of young men and women who are seeking an overthrow of Tsar Nicholas. Into this cauldron of politics, superstitions, and traditions comes a woman who is desperately trying to find out who she is and what her place is in the world. The book is outstanding in its sense of time and place; the clarity and resonance of life in Minsk, Kiev, Siberia, and other Russian locales is carefully crafted-- as well done as the blue fabric that Tsila (Miriam's stepmother) expertly weaves. The plight of young women who must submit to arranged marriages and lives of toil and neighborhood gossip is also well done. The title -- Your Mouth Is Lovely -- comes from a prayer that Miriam's mouth would always merit the gift of speech. It is an empowering prayer, presented to Miriam as a present, at an age where speech is usually conducted in the home, at the shul, or at neighborhood gatherings. Tsila wants more for her stepdaughter and hopes to give her authenticity through the power of words. But -- and herein lies the problem -- Miriam is an unlikely recipient of that prayer. She becomes a revolutionary, and eventually is exiled to Siberia, but she does not seem to be the "revolutionary type." The extreme fear alone of a prior incarceration would seem to have been enough to discourage her from becoming involved with her fiery, forward-thinking aunt and her cohorts. But Miriam constantly allows life to carry her, instead of directing it; she seems unusually passive for a woman who is taken on the weight of history. At times, the trajectory of the plot overshadows the development of Miriam's character. As a result, I recommend this book -- particularly as a fine snapshot of the times -- with certain qualifications.

Think of a Dvorak Romantic Piece -- Beautifully Tragic!

This is a wonderfully rich story with characters so authentically portrayed that I still think of them. I wish that this author would write more. Think Dickens & Tolstoy -- it's here. If you like a little sadness sprinkled with lots of great atmosphere & good dialolgue, this is a must read!! There is music, in a minor key, on every page!! It will, most likely, remain to be one of my favorite books. I've only kept a few of my books. Among those kept are: Pat Conroy's works, Nuala O'Faolain's book, Katie Singer's book & this rare jewel!!

A good book

This novel is an interesting look into rural Jewish culture and society within imperial Russia. It is also a fascinating look at women giving their lives for the "cause" in the 1905 Russian Revolution. I quite enjoyed this story. Miriam, the main character, is an interesting individual with a dramatic past, present, and future. The writing is excellent and the story keeps you interested. I did get a bit lost in the Jewish nomenclature of special days and events, but a dictionary helped with that.

A bittersweet tale of both motherhood and daughterhood

Modern Russian literature is renowned for its ability to render revolutionary action and violence into poetry and lyrical prose. Passionate, as well as intellectually and emotionally challenging, it is often able to present darkness and sorrow in a beautiful artistic light. Nancy Richler, in her second novel, has taken the desperation found in many of the Russian classics, softened it with Jewish folkloric style and created a touching and memorable novel. In YOUR MOUTH IS LOVELY, part Trotsky, part Tolstoy and part Sholom Aleichem, Richler presents the failed 1905 Russian Revolution from the perspective of shtetl, or village, Jews and presents the shtetl and its inhabitants from the perspective of one young Jewish revolutionary.The story centers on Miriam, the narrator of the tale. It is 1912; she is only 23 and serving a life sentence in a Siberian prison for violent and subversive action against the state. But her intent in writing is not to disseminate socialist ideals. Instead she is writing to the daughter who does not know her and never will, the daughter she bore in prison. She is writing her life story. So, it is with the tenderness of a mother's love that the tale is told, despite the hardships the characters endure.Miriam's mother drowned herself the day Miriam was born, still grieving from the loss of her infant son. Miriam's father, Aaron Lev, put her in the care of the wet-nurse Lipsa, who raised Miriam as one of her own for almost six years. When Aaron Lev marries Tsila, a strong-willed and sharply intelligent young woman, they send for Miriam and thus a new stage in her life begins. Under Tsila's tutelage, Miriam continues her Jewish education, but is also taught to think for herself and question the world around her. Tsila, known as a sour woman, shows Miriam the only maternal love she ever knows. Miriam quickly adapts to her new life with Tsila and Aaron Lev --- and adaptability becomes a theme in her life as she is incredibly impressionable in her acts and opinions. Despite the home she shares with Tsila and Aaron Lev and the predictable patterns of shtetl life, she is haunted by the deaths of her mother and brother, neither of whom she ever knew. As she grows up, the spirit of revolution moves many Jews across the countryside. Tsila's sister Bayla is one of them and eventually moves to Kiev to create the bombs that will fuel the revolution. Aaron Lev and Tsila, desiring a new life free of anti-Semitism, pogroms and brutal winters, decide to move to Argentina. Miriam is sent to Kiev to locate Bayla and the socialist agitators and radicals quickly put her to work. The illegal Bund meetings she attended in the shtetl cannot prepare her for the type of life she is about to embark upon.After several months in prison following an initial arrest, living with a mysterious man named Wolf in the typhus-ridden ravines of Kiev and a single sexual encounter, Miriam finds herself again arrested but this time pregnant and facing the death pen

Haunting portrait of pre-revolutionary Russian shtetl life

Exploring her own Russian-Jewish roots, Canadian author Richler ("Throw Away Angels") sets her first U.S.-published novel in pre-revolutionary Russia, with its pogroms, poverty, foment and brutal repression. The book takes the form of a chronicle written from a Siberian prison by 23-year-old Miriam for the daughter she has not seen since the day of her birth, six years before. It's late winter, 1911, and the long season has taken its toll."We're beyond tired, beyond cold. The blood that fills my mouth is sticky, souring even as I still draw breath. Job floats unbidden into mind. NAKED CAME I INTO THE WORLD AND NAKED WILL I LEAVE IT THITHER. The cold drags on even as the light returns. I write to you, but my hand falters. TO EVERYTHING ITS SEASON, and mine was this: twenty-three years in the bowels of the turning century. I feel my end coming. THE LORD GIVETH AND HE TAKETH AWAY. Then I cough again and it's the taste of my own blood that spurs me on. Is it not still thick and pungent and rich as the heart that pumps it? I pick up the pen once again and move it across the page." Miriam then begins her life story with the circumstances of her birth in a rural shtetl in 1887. Her mother drowned herself the day after her daughter's birth and Miriam spent her first six years with a large, boisterous peasant family before her shoemaker father remarried and reclaimed his daughter. The talented seamstress, Tsila, his new wife, her face "marked by Divine anger" (a large strawberry birthmark) is considered ill-tempered, but Miriam, though intimidated, is struck by the beauty of the unmarked profile and soon benefits from her stepmother's sharp intellect. True, the house is quieter than Miriam is used to and Tsila has no patience for the gossip and superstition of village life, but she teaches Miriam to read and fosters an interest in the wider world.Unfortunately, revolutionary fervor comes to the shtetl while Miriam is old enough to be wandering about on her own, but not old enough to benefit from her stepmother's wisdom. Flattered by an offer of friendship, Miriam toys with revolutionary ideas, feeling like a fraud for her lack of real interest. Nevertheless she hides a parcel of dynamite for a young man she barely knows, frightening Tsila into setting in motion a plan for emigrating to Argentina. But before they go Miriam journeys to Kiev to find Tsila's sister who is shamefully cohabiting with a young revolutionary. Miriam is seduced by the city - its multitudes, architecture, variety - all its teeming life. Day by day, week by week, she resists returning home, and once again is drawn to the young intellectuals - the revolutionaries.Richler successfully evokes the emotions and wonder of a young girl at the turn of the century, struck by her first metropolis, falling almost without volition into the danger and excitement of revolution. Miriam is never political. Her fate is a simple accident of timing, and all the sadder for that. Richler's brief portrai
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