About the Author:

Rita Alexandrovich
Boston, USA
A librarian by training, Rita emigrated to the U.S. from the Soviet Union in 1988. She has been writing poetry since childhood. Nowadays, she also writes prose, which is a new stage in her life.

A librarian by training, Rita emigrated to the U.S. from the Soviet Union in 1988. She has been writing poetry since childhood. Nowadays, she also writes prose, which is a new stage in her life.
When Clea returns to London with her new Russian husband, she is surprised to see him become even more eccentric.
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.
“13 short pieces…pungently convey the effects of growing up under a totalitarian regime.” .—Publishers Weekly
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