

When I was reading this today and the doorbell rang I thought that was her come round with some freshly baked pampushky. Check! Boy oh boy does our first person narrator want you to like her. Check! She's British Ukrainian and this is all about British Ukrainian stuff.Ģ - Decide on a strong central narrator and give them a winning personality.

This reads like the author has earnestly followed some kind of How To Write a Comic Novel course.ġ - write about what you know. With her proclivity for green satin underwear and boil-in-the-bag cuisine, she will stop at nothing in her pursuit of Western wealth.īut the sisters' campaign to oust Valentina unearths family secrets, uncovers fifty years of Europe's darkest history and sends them back to roots they'd much rather forget. Sisters Vera and Nadezhda must aside a lifetime of feuding to save their émigré engineer father from voluptuous gold-digger Valentina.

She exploded into our lives like a fluffy pink grenade, churning up the murky water, bringing to the surface a sludge of sloughed-off memories, giving the family ghosts a kick up the backside. He was eighty-four and she was thirty-six. Two years after my mother died, my father fell in love with a glamorous blonde Ukrainian divorcée. Lewycka tells the side-splittingly funny story of two feuding sisters, Vera and Nadezhda, who join forces against their father's new, gold-digging girlfriend. A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian was bestselling author Marina Lewycka's bestselling debut novel which has sold over one million copies worldwide.
