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Be as Children

Contributor(s): Sharov, Vladimir (Author), Ready, Oliver (Translator)

ISBN: 9781912868346

Publisher: Dedalus

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Pub Date: February 28, 2025

Dewey: 891.735

LCCN: 2020478928

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.50" H x 7.81" L x 5.19" W ( 0.95 lbs) 496 pages

Series: Dedalus Europe

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: At the center of Be As Children is an ailing Vladimir Lenin, infected not with syphilis, as some historians have claimed, but with Christian fervor. Regressing stroke by stroke to an infancy of his own, he renounces his faith in the proletariat and puts all his hope in the many children left homeless and orphaned by the Civil War. Only they will be loyal to the cause and only they can save it. Around this story Sharov weaves two other plots: a murderer who converts a Siberian people to Christianity and the life story of a female holy fool. Epic in scope and highly original in execution, Be as Little Children shows exactly why, since his untimely death in 2018, Vladimir Sharov has been widely celebrated in Russia as one of the few outstanding novelists of his era and a true heir to the classic authors of the nineteenth century.

Brief description: A historian of late-medieval Russia by training Vladimir Sharov (1952-2018), first turned to fiction in the late 1970s. It was not until the 1990s, however, that his extraordinarily imaginative and daring novels come to the attention of the public. When they did, they caused acrimony and controversy.

Before and During in 2014 was his first novel to appear in English, which was followed in 2018 by The Rehearsals and now Be As Children, all translated by Oliver Ready. He has won all the major Russian literary prizes including the Booker Prize in 2014.

Review Quotes: "Be As Children by Vladimir Sharov, superbly translated by Oliver Ready, is a hugely inventive tumble through a reimagined version of Russian history in which, among many other events, a post-stroke Lenin decides children are the only real hope of the revolution. It's one of the best novels I've read so far this year." -Declan O'Driscoll, reviewer for The Irish Times

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