Skylarks and Rebels: A Memoir about the Soviet Russian Occupation of Latvia, Life in a Totalitarian State, and Freedom

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Columbia University Press, Apr 25, 2017 - Biography & Autobiography - 502 pages
Skylarks and Rebels is a story about the fate of Latvia in the 20th century as told by Rita Laima. Laima, a Latvian-American, chose to leave behind the comforts of life in America to explore the land of her ancestors, which in the 1980s languished behind the Iron Curtain. In writing about her own experiences in a totalitarian state, Soviet-occupied Latvia, Laima delves into her family’s past to understand what happened to her fatherland and its people during and after World War II. She also pays tribute to some of Latvia’s remarkable people of integrity who risked their lives to oppose the brutal and destructive Soviet state.
 

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Contents

Introduction
With gratitude
A Country the Size of West Virginia
New Jersey Latvian American Girl and Trimda
Latvia as a BattlefieldWorld War II
Pēteris and Dārta Bičolis of Sēlija
Return to Terra Incognita
Farewell Latvia
Art in the Forest
A Wedding in Snow
The Controller Is Coming
Leniniana
Fresh Air in the Latvian Countryside
Ghosts
Roosters and Cats in Old Rīga
New Life

The 1980s
Letter dated January 4 1983 to my parents in New Jersey
New Beginnings at Krāmu iela 104a Tel 211951
Letters
Practicum
Rīga Central Market Central Kolhoz Market
Remnants of Bourgeois Nationalism
Vot vot Comrade Ilmarovna
The Thaw
Bearslayer
Copyright

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About the author (2017)

Rita Laima is a published writer, translator, and children’s book illustrator. Born in the United States to the children of refugees who settled in New Jersey, Laima was raised biculturally, speaking Latvian at home. After studying art at Parsons School of Design in New York City, she traveled to Latvia in 1982 and lived there for 17 years. During that time, she experienced life under Soviet communism, the Soviet Union’s efforts to russify her ancestral country, Latvia’s National Awakening, and its long-awaited independence from the USSR in 1991. Rita Laima currently lives in the Washington, DC area.

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