Reviewed by Lianne on
I read her first memoir, A Mountain of Crumbs a few years ago and really enjoyed it. Russian Tattoo is an interesting continuation to that book, picking up where the first volume left off with her travelling to the United States to start her new life. This book covers her experiences in America and is very much the immigrant’s experience; it’s not just the culture shock and the lifestyle differences she’s faced with but an entire ideology and character that she’s never faced before. As a result, she finds herself contrasting the things she encounters in America with the things she knows growing up in Soviet Russia.
She also finds herself frequently remembering the things her mother likes to quote and say depending on the situation, which she finds strange given everything she’s done was to separate herself from her mother. Thus in many ways this book is a fascinating meditation about relationships between mothers and daughters, as she finds herself bridged between her mother and her equally-strong-willed daughter.
There’s quite a number of time jumps as Elena focuses on key moments in her life in America, but the contrasts are interesting as she progresses through the 80s, the collapse of the Soviet Union, and into the 90s. I really enjoyed reading her second memoir and highly recommend it.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 2 December, 2014: Finished reading
- 2 December, 2014: Reviewed