She is so delicately and warmly evoked, however, that the reader is stirred to empathy rather than impatience. There’s no doubt that the mother is a wounded soul, who struggles and fails to be happy, but the author offers no pat answers about why. The grandmother and step-grandfather help bring up the little girl.Īlthough the oppression of life under Communism infuses this tender tale, Soviet Milk is principally a story about individual character, not politics. On the way, a one-night stand after a dance results in the birth of a daughter of her own, but she’s so traumatized she cannot bear even to breastfeed her. Though in due course acquiring a loving stepfather, she grows up a strange, lonely, isolated child, who becomes consumed by her ambition to study medicine. The mother (neither of the main characters is given a name) was born in war-shattered Riga in 1944, but shortly afterwards her father was beaten up by the soldiers plundering his crops and taken away, leaving his wife and baby to fend for themselves. Set between 19, the novel is narrated alternately by a mother and daughter who both grow up in a Latvia under Soviet rule. Soviet Milk is her most recent, and won the 2015 Annual Latvian Literature Award for Best Prose. Nora Ikstena’s first novel was published in 1998 and she has written over twenty books since.
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