About the Author:

Lada Miller
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Lada Miller is a writer and a poet. She has authored six books and won several awards, including the Ernest Hemingway Award 2020 from the New World magazine (Toronto, Canada).

Lada Miller is a writer and a poet. She has authored six books and won several awards, including the Ernest Hemingway Award 2020 from the New World magazine (Toronto, Canada).
When Clea returns to London with her new Russian husband, she is surprised to see him become even more eccentric.
After a century of brooding and talking telepathically to his Mausoleum janitor from his glass coffin, Vladimir Lenin awakens—alive and bewildered in the modern world.
A haunting dystopia some readers have called “the new 1984.” In a society where memory is rewritten and resistance is pre-approved, freedom isn’t restricted; it’s redefined. As systems evolve beyond human control and choice becomes a simulation, true defiance means refusing the script, even when the system already knows you will.
Original poetry by Nina Kossman, accompanied by a selection of poems by Marina Tsvetaeva, translated from Russian by Kossman. “The sea is a postcard,” writes Nina Kossman. There is both something elemental in this vision and—iron-tough.” —Ilya Kaminsky