Review of "The Secret History of Moscow"
Picture by Bob Canada Sometimes logic isn't about A + B = C. Sometimes it's * + % = platypus, or in the case of Russian folklore, maiden + drowning = rusalki. Russian folktales are wonderfully unpredictable to a cowpoke like me, and I love the twisty concepts of justice embedded in tales. Consequently, The Secret History of Moscow completely rocked my world. Ekaterina Sedia , born in Russia, weaves Russian folktales together and integrates them with a modern urban fantasy plot. The protagonist, Galina, has spent most of her adult life bouncing in and out of asylums, and subsequently does not expect anyone to believe her when her pregnant sister turns into a bird, leaving the baby behind on the bathroom floor. Driven by love and the guilt that the healthy, whole sister was the one taken, Galina joins a homeless artist and one of Moscow's finest in the search for Masha beneath Moscow's ancient streets. Her prose was as smooth as rich as a whiskey on ...