The Knife Sharpener's Bell

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Coteau Books, Sep 16, 2014 - Fiction - 328 pages
Annette Gershon’s odyssey from depression-era Winnipeg to Stalinist Russia and back to Canada in the 1950s is both the seldom-told story of those who actually made that hopeful, doomed, journey, and a testament to the tenacity of the human spirit. Ten-year old Annette Gershon is content enough growing up in her father’s delicatessen on Main Street Winnipeg, but for immigrant families scratching out a living in the Dirty Thirties, even subsistence is a delicate balance, easily upset. Everything changes when her parents decide to take the family "home" to the Soviet Union to escape the devastation of the collapsing capitalist economy. Annette struggles to maintain her sense of who she is, first adapting to her life in Stalinist Odessa, then fleeing to Moscow, ahead of the Nazi occupation. But it is in the post-war years that her identity, and her very life, are threatened by the anti-Semitism of Stalinism’s final years. The Knife Sharpener's Bell is the story of a girl who tried to stop a train, but finds herself on the runaway train of historical events. It is a story about loyalty and betrayal, heroism and fear. What is most memorable about it is the empathy we feel for these characters, who must make their way through some of the twentieth century's most tumultuous events. The writing is infused with a poet's sensitivities to rhythm, image, and linguistic energy, yet it is also beautifully restrained – each image and each gorgeous observation is there for a very particular reason; the entire story hums with the tension that arises from the taut, athletic language.
 

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Contents

Prologue
7
Chapter One
9
Chapter Two
69
Chapter Three
98
Chapter Four
120
Chapter Five
132
Chapter Six
166
Chapter Seven
194
Chapter Eight
215
Chapter Nine
240
Chapter Ten
266
Chapter Eleven
280
Chapter Twelve
293
Acknowledgements
323
Author Biography
325
Copyright

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About the author (2014)

Rhea Tregebov was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada in 1953. She received a BA in English at the University of Manitoba and a MA in English from Boston University. She worked for years as a freelance technical writer and is currently an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, where she teaches poetry, children's literature and literary translation. She is the author of several collections of poetry including No One We Know, The Proving Grounds, and The Strength of Materials. Remembering History won the Pat Lowther Award and Poems from Mapping the Chaos received the Prairie Schooner Readers' Choice Award and the Malahat Review Long Poem Award. She is also the author of several children's picture books including The Extraordinary Ordinary Everything Room, The Big Storm, Sasha and the Wiggly Tooth, Sasha and the Wind, and What-If Sara. She wrote an adult novel entitled The Knife Sharpener's Bell in 2009.

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