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Reviews for Every hunter wants to know

 Every hunter wants to know magazine reviews

The average rating for Every hunter wants to know based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2012-05-07 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Steve Lauzier
I've been reading /Every Hunter/ on and off for a few weeks, and I find that I am always at home here, despite time away between. The stories take place in Soviet Russia (mostly Leningrad), as well as in Boston and New York, and follow the life of Yevgeny Litovtsev. One senses the presence of a true writer and storyteller here, behind each of these narrators, inviting the reader in, despite, and even because of the possible danger. This is especially true in the title story, "Every Hunter Wants to Know," a truly masterful work. If you can read only one of Iossel's stories, read this one. The opening is fantastic, and the descriptions of Yvegeny's family truly wonderful. I felt like I was there, in the child's body, astounded with the characters around me. The story details a trip into the forest to hunt for mushrooms, but it is about so much more, about the workings of memory, the terrors of childhood, the development of an artist, the pressure writers often feel to present the obvious rather than the mysterious and inexplicable. I find myself thinking about Yvegeny lost in the woods with his two mushrooms, not knowing that his grandmother is close, quite often. This is a story that sticks with you, and harkens the world and the tumultuous history that Yvegeny will eventually venture into. You will smell the mushrooms, hear the whispers in the woods, and wait outside the forest for the return of the lost family dog. While I love the childhood stories, the final stories in the collection are also wonderful--and strangely terrifying. Iossel describes Yevgeny's sense of dislocation and disorientation after emigrating to Boston so well that I actually felt Yevgeny's nausea as my own. "Insomnia" is a fantastic story, and a perfect story to end the book with as Yevgeny discovers that English is making him ill and that he is strangely no longer himself in a world where he cannot express himself as he could in his native language--the story captures his disorientation and produces a near delirium in the reader. Anyone who has tried to live and work in a new country while trying to learn a new language will recognize this "place," but it's all the more intense here because this story occurs just after Perestroika in Boston and NYC.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-02-25 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Kenneth Martin
A thriller set in turbulent mid-1990s St Petersburg, starting Colin Burke, an editor for the Washington Tribune. One of Burke's friends, who took a recent trip to the Hermitage in St Petersburg, was brutally murdered. Suspecting a link, Burke takes off for Russia, ending up in the middle of some shady Russian gangsters, Leonardo da Vinci, Columbian drug lords, art historians, newspaper turf wars, a beautiful American art gallery owner, and the Russian people themselves--struggling to survive amidst the political chaos, the rampant crime, and the freezing February temperatures. A little technologically dated perhaps (the lack of cell phones in books like this always makes it obvious that they aren't contemporary), but otherwise a fast and intriguing read, even today.


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