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The Lazarus Project

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The only novel from MacArthur Genius Award winner, Aleksandar Hemon — the National Book Critics Circle Award winning The Lazarus Project.
On March 2, 1908, nineteen-year-old Lazarus Averbuch, an Eastern European Jewish immigrant, was shot to death on the doorstep of the Chicago chief of police and cast as a would-be anarchist assassin.
A century later, a young Eastern European writer in Chicago named Brik becomes obsessed with Lazarus's story. Brik enlists his friend Rora-a war photographer from Sarajevo-to join him in retracing Averbuch's path.
Through a history of pogroms and poverty, and a prism of a present-day landscape of cheap mafiosi and even cheaper prostitutes, the stories of Averbuch and Brik become inextricably intertwined, creating a truly original, provocative, and entertaining novel that confirms Aleksandar Hemon, often compared to Vladimir Nabokov, as one of the most dynamic and essential literary voices of our time.
From the author of The Book of My Lives.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 24, 2008
      MacArthur genius Hemon in his third book (after Nowhere Man
      ) intelligently unpacks 100 years’ worth of immigrant disillusion, displacement and desperation. As fears of the anarchist movement roil 1908 Chicago, the chief of police guns down Lazarus Averbuch, an eastern European immigrant Jew who showed up at the chief’s doorstep to deliver a note. Almost a century later, Bosnian-American writer Vladimir Brik secures a coveted grant and begins working on a book about Lazarus; his research takes him and fellow Bosnian Rora, a fast-talking photographer whose photos appear throughout the novel, on a twisted tour of eastern Europe (there are brothel-hotels, bouts of violence, gallons of coffee and many fabulist stories from Rora) that ends up being more a journey into their own pasts than a fact-finding mission. Sharing equal narrative duty is the story of Olga Averbuch, Lazarus’s sister, who, hounded by the police and the press (the Tribune
      reporter is especially vile), is faced with another shock: the disappearance of her brother’s body from his potter’s grave. (His name, after all, was Lazarus.) Hemon’s workmanlike prose underscores his piercing wit, and between the murders that bookend the novel, there’s pathos and outrage enough to chip away at even the hardest of hearts.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from April 1, 2008
      After two short story collections ("The Question of Bruno; Nowhere Man"), MacArthur Award recipient Hemon brings us a novel worth reading with as much fire as its composition must have demanded. The "New York Times" rightfully calls Hemon "not simply gifted but necessary." Reading Hemon's image-viscous prose is like anxiously wading through dark emotion. It's the story of Brik, who fled to Chicago from Sarajevo during war, married a neurosurgeon, and became a writer. Obsessed with the story of Lazarus Averbuchan Eastern European immigrant who was murdered in 1908 in Chicago, five years after escaping the pogromsBrik returns with photographer friend Rora to Eastern Europe to immerse himself in his and Lazarus's old lives. Through Rora's stories of wartime Sarajevo and glimpses of Brik's life, we understand their outsider anguish in America. Also, through flashbacks of Lazarus's death, Hemon reveals the other mystery. This story could be compared with Jonathan Safran-Foer's "Everything Is Illuminated" in that it's one character's Eastern European search for enlightenment. Highly recommended for all public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 1/08.]Stephen Morrow, Athens, OH

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 1, 2008
      Lazarus Averbuch, a recent immigrant and survivor of the infamous Kishinev pogrom, tries tosee Chicagoschief of policeearly on March 2, 1908, but he is shot to death before he can state his mission. The powers-that-be finger theundernourished young Jew as an anarchist and harass his seamstress sister, Olga, as part of a brutal cover-up. So begins MacArthur fellow Hemons third and most galvanizing work of fiction. The basic story of Lazarus murder is true, and Hemon tells it with vigor and outrage, covertly paralleling early-twentieth-centuryanti-Semitic hysteria over anarchists with early-twenty-first-century stereotyping of Islamic terrorists. Powerful stuff, andyet just one facet of a remarkably trenchant novel. Vladimir Brik, a struggling Bosnian writer living in present-day Chicago, decides to write about Lazarus and embarks on a grant-funded research expedition withphotographer Rora. The two endureludicrous, risky, and wrenching adventures inlong-tyrannized Moldova and Sarajevo, andHemon, a gloves-off heir to Nabokov, riffs audaciously on the biblicalLazarus, venomously condemnsgangsterdom, and praises those who hold on to their humanity in the maelstrom of genocide. Charged with fury and empathy, Hemons sentences seethe and hiss, their dangerous beauty matched by Velibor Bozovics eloquent black-and-white photographs, creating an excoriating novel of rare moral clarity.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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