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The Nansen Factor

Refugee Stories

Alexandra Grabbe

$36.95   $31.61

Paperback

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English
Cherry Orchard Books
21 August 2024
""A compassionate rendering of acclimation and its many challenges.""-Booklist

This bold debut collection of stories follows the lives of those displaced by the Bolshevik Revolution and their descendants, shining a light on the lasting impact of displacement and the resiliency of the human spirit.

Norwegian diplomat Fridtjof Nansen created a passport for stateless persons used by refugees as a valid travel document from 1922-1937. The world is all too aware of what has happened to Russia in the century since then-Lenin, Stalin, and now Putin with his iron-fist policies and invasion of Ukraine. But what about the aristocrats whose ancestors governed Russia before Communism? How did they fare in displacement? Civil War, Red Terror, and Bolshevik rule caused over one million to flee Russia. Written by the daughter of one such emigre,The Nansen Factortraces the lives of these refugees and their descendants across a century of upheaval and displacement. From the turmoil of the Bolshevik Revolution to the echoes of the past in modern-day America, these interconnected tales vividly portray the resilience of individuals uprooted by history at a moment when migrants are once again on the move in search of refuge, highlighting how the pain of losing one's homeland may fade, but the injury to the psyche is slow to heal.
By:  
Imprint:   Cherry Orchard Books
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 10mm
Weight:   244g
ISBN:   9798887195094
Pages:   140
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  General/trade ,  ELT Advanced ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Acknowledgements Note to the Reader Preface The Errand The Picnic Out of This World Walnuts The Announcement No Imposition The Horror Of It All Time of the Pale Green Light “La Petite Boche” The Mother, the Daughter, and the Con Man Hanky-panky The Revelation Buried Treasure The Courage It Takes Shamil The Pilgrimage

After graduation from Vassar College, Alexandra Grabbe worked in journalism and broadcasting while raising three bicultural children in Paris, France. For two decades, she ran an eco-friendly bed-and-breakfast on Cape Cod, where she edited her father's memoir. Two of his ancestors are mentioned in Tolstoy's War and Peace. Now dividing her time between Sweden and Boston, Alexandra continues her lifelong passion as an author. Find her recent work in The Washington Post, Better After 50, and Next Avenue at Alexandragrabbe.com.

Reviews for The Nansen Factor: Refugee Stories

“Exceptionally well crafted, original, and inherently fascinating from start to finish, the sixteen short stories by Alexandra Grabbe and presented in ""The Nansen Factor: Refugee Stories"" from Cherry Orchard Books raise this work of historical fiction to an impressive level of true literary elegance. ""The Nansen Factor"" is one of those books that will linger in the mind and memory of the reader long after it is finished and set back upon the shelf.” —Midwest Book Review “The stories in this impressive collection beautifully express the enrichment and estrangement of displaced lives. With a single phrase or tiny detail, Grabbe accurately captures an entire soul and the fractured, complicated state of living between worlds. A bold and engrossing debut with unforgettable characters.”  — Marjan Kamali, author of The Stationery and The Lion Women of Tehran “The Nansen Factor weaves a tapestry of lives uprooted and reshaped by the tides of history. From the stirring upheaval of the Bolshevik Revolution to the haunting memories of Paris and beyond, these interconnected stories traverse a century of exile, loss, and resilience. Each tale is a testament to the spirit of those who must forge new paths from the fragments of the past.” — Sana Krasikov, author of One More Year and The Patriots “Spanning the globe from St. Petersburg to Shanghai, Grabbe’s stunning debut charts the interconnected lives of unmoored Russians and their descendants. The Nansen Factor dramatizes a century of love, loss, longing, brutality, and determination as experienced by a sweeping cast of characters, from poor migrants to aspiring actors to modern-day Americans haunted by the past. This is a riveting and essential collection.” — Chip Creek, author of Cape May “The Nansen Factor opens us to the multitude of ways immigration trauma emerges in new generations. These are poignant stories of the opportunity and hardship of reclaiming lives in a new land. The fallacy of forgetting and the management of grief is a human predicament, and these moving stories are a testament to this shared humanity. Such an important message for our times!” — Laurel M. Silber, Psy. D. ""These poignant and beautifully crafted tales bring a human touch to the bittersweet experience of exile."" — Anatol Shmelev, Ph.D., Robert Conquest Curator for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia, Hoover Institution, Stanford University “Gorgeous prose, delicate storytelling that tugs at the reader’s heartstrings. The entire generation of White Russia, the first wave of Russian emigration, comes alive. This book gives personal scale to the vastness of their displacement around the globe. Engrossing, timely and empathetic towards the victims of political upheaval.” — Yelena Lembersky, author of Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour “The Nansen Factor is a spellbinding exploration of migration and exile, and the aftershocks that ripple through generations. Alexandra Grabbe animates the impact of history’s vast movements on individual lives in these insightful, elegant, and moving stories. This is a wonderful collection.”  — Laura van den Berg, author of State of Paradise, Find Me, and Hold a Wolf by the Ears “From this stunning kaleidoscope of individual tales emerges an expansive and affecting depiction of the dislocation, grief, nostalgia, and resilience that characterize the generation of White Russians displaced by the Bolshevik Revolution—and that reverberate in their descendants to this day. At once a lament and a salute to this phenomenon, The Nansen Factor introduces an extraordinary variety of characters with descriptions that are as lush as they are precise.” — Sarah C. Baldwin, Writer


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