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All That is Solid Melts into Air
All That is Solid Melts into Air | Darragh McKeon
8 posts | 4 read | 25 to read
Under a crimson dawn sky, Artyom Telvatnikov stands in a field of cows, his fingertips glistening with warm blood that streams from their ears. It is April 1986, and ten miles away, above the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, clusters of sparks fill the air, inflaming the final years of the Soviet Union, inciting its citizens to actions of brutality, mystery and terrible beauty. Grigory, a surgeon working in the wake of the disaster, in a place where all natural order has been distorted, is forced to question everything he has known. In Moscow, his estranged wife, Maria, a former dissident, struggles to free herself from the constraints imposed upon her by the state. Her nephew Yevgeni is a nine-year-old piano prodigy whose sense of rhythm is rapidly eroding. In All That Is Solid Melts into Air, Darragh McKeon blends an array of these and other characters into a strikingly visceral portrait of a place and a people in the midst of terrifying change. Praise for All That is Solid Melts into Air This daring and ambitious novel blends historical epic and love story with a detailed and moving description of the Chernobyl disaster and the fall of the Soviet Union. Darragh McKeon handles the struggles of his characters with care and compassion and creates a book rich with resonance far beyond its historical moment. Colm Tibn Brilliantly imagined in its harrowing account of the Chernobyl disaster and exhilarating in its sweep, All That is Solid Melts Into Air is a debut to rattle all the windows and open up the ventricles of the heart. McKeon creates a thrilling appearance of ease, while he delves deep and forges new territory for the contemporary novel. The book is daring, exhilarating, generous and beautifully written. History is rendered here as a rising choir of contradictory demands. McKeon probes the forgotten corners of human experience and makes them properly valuable. Throughout it all, he writes with an ear for the quiet captivations of the human heart. All That is Solid Melts into Air marks the beginning of a truly significant career. I cannot say it loud enough. McKeon is here to stay. Colum McCann Darragh McKeon has crafted a quietly monumental portrait of Soviet particulars and human universals. The confidence, insight, and above all deep feeling mark All That is Solid Melts into Air as an astounding debut. Charles Foran
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abookishbutterfly
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I didn‘t choose this for #hotinherre so I could be insensitive to the real life casualties of Chernobyl, but the prompt does create an opportunity to make everyone aware of the book, if you aren‘t already. It‘s fiction but with all the Netflix hype, I thought some of you might be interested in it. #songsofsummer @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @OriginalCyn620

OriginalCyn620 😎📚🎶 5y
86 likes1 stack add1 comment
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MStew
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"All That Is Solid Melts into Air is a gripping end-of-empire novel, charting the collapse of the Soviet Union through the focalpoint of the Chernobyl disaster. Part historical epic, part love story, it recalls The English Patient in its mix of emotional intimacy and sweeping landscape."

I found this randomly but I knew i had to read it ! I'll read anything set in Russia especially when it's historical fiction on Chernobyl!

#historical

Cathythoughts ❤️❤️❤️ 6y
DebReads4fun Gorgeous cover! 6y
JennyM Beautiful cover 6y
See All 9 Comments
Kayla.Adriena I was going to say what everyone else already said about the cover! Sounds interesting! #Stacked 6y
MStew @JennyM I know it really is 😍 6y
MStew @Kayla.Adriena it sounds so good!! 6y
MStew @Cathythoughts 😄🤗 6y
Themrsdowler Oh that sounds fantastic! Chernobyl has always fascinated me. 6y
105 likes8 stack adds9 comments
review
Hooked_on_books
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Bailedbailed

This sounded fascinating—the effect of the Chernobyl disaster on the lives of multiple characters interwoven with the realities of living under the Russian government. Unfortunately, I‘ve listened to about 30% of it and am completely uninterested. Nothing much seems to be happening and as soon as I start to gain some interest in a character, it moves on to another. Bummer.

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kaysworld1
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April's not over yet!....
OK so here's my last #freakyfridaychallenge book.

While we are here I just want to say that you to @BooksAtNight for her list of books also @Clwojick and @monalyisha for setting everything up.
if we are doing this again I am soooooo in 📚😃

monalyisha You‘re welcome! And I love that you‘d do it again. Thanks for saying so! 🤗 6y
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TrishB
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#doomed #aprella
Chernobyl disaster written from the viewpoint of everyday Russians. Informative and thoughtful.

Cathythoughts Sounds good 👍🏻 6y
Aloisi_tribe $1.99 on Kindle! I scooped this up. I‘m a sucker for every day histories and anything about Chernobyl. Thanks for the rec! 6y
TrishB @Aloisi_tribe 👍🏻 hope you like it. I found it really interesting that the author has really tried to tell it from the everyday Russian perspective. 6y
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Mdargusch That was such a tragedy! I remember when it happened. 6y
emilyhaldi Fascinating! Stacking this 👍🏻 6y
Reviewsbylola I am so intrigued by Chernobyl. 6y
Balibee146 I remember it too and the restrained but palpable worry in Scotland about contaminated rainfall due to the wind direction afterwards. Terrible tragedy and there are incredible stories of heroism and sacrifice. 6y
TrishB @Balibee146 my Sister was pregnant at the time and my nephew was diagnosed with cancer before he was 2. It was a very rare cancer (less than 5 reported a year) yet that year there were 9 cases just on Merseyside. Drs thought - but not proven - it was down to Chernobyl. My nephew is fine now 😁 as you say - it was a very worrying time. 6y
Balibee146 @TrishB that's so scary.... So glad he was fine in the end but what a terrible frightening experience 😢😢 the cost worldwide of the disaster must be massive in scale and unknowable. Will be reading this book 👍 6y
TrishB @Balibee146 we‘ll never know the true cost will we. 6y
Cinfhen I remember this event ~ crazy to think it could have reached to your family 😱 6y
TrishB @Cinfhen makes the world a small place! 6y
124 likes11 stack adds12 comments
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TrishB
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Time Will Crawl was the second single from Bowie's 1987 album Never Let Me Down. The song reached number 33 in the UK charts and number 7 in the USA.
The song is about the increasing threat of industrial and chemical damage to the planet, plus the threat of nuclear damage.
This is a theme Bowie would return to on various songs including When The Wind Blows- the theme tune for the animated film based on a story by Raymond Briggs. 👇

TrishB Bowie was known to be particularly fond of this song , being quoted as saying " without a doubt one of the favourite songs of my career". 7y
TrishB I picked the book (me not hubby) as it seemed to fit the theme. This is an excellent read about what it must have been like to be in Russia at the time of the Chernobyl disaster. #septembowie #timewillcrawl @Cinfhen @Marchpane 7y
Cinfhen Love this information and book choice! I was struggling with a book for today! 7y
Cathythoughts I didn't know any of this. Thankyou 7y
Marchpane Wow this book sounds wonderful! Terrifying, and wonderful. 7y
90 likes5 comments
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GypsyKat
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#MarchIntoReading #SpinePoetry @RealLifeReading All that is solid melts into air. The light between oceans, shadow of night, fire. Lone survivor? Stars above.

Caroline2 Lone survivor is a really good book! Fascinating, well written, exciting and stays with you a longgg time after you've read it! The film is brilliant too! X 7y
51 likes1 comment