Margins
Learning Cyrillic book cover
Learning Cyrillic
Stories
2012
First Published
3.69
Average Rating
189
Number of Pages
"Learning Cyrillic" presents a selection of fiction by Serbian master David Albahari written since his departure from Europe. In these twenty short stories, written and published in their original language over the past twenty years, Albahari addresses immigrant life—the need to fit into one's adopted homeland—as well as the joys and terrors of refusing to give up one's essential "strangeness" in the face of an alien culture.
Avg Rating
3.69
Number of Ratings
26
5 STARS
15%
4 STARS
42%
3 STARS
38%
2 STARS
4%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

David Albahari
David Albahari
Author · 18 books

David Albahari is a Serbian writer of Jewish origin from Kosovo, residing in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Albahari writes mainly novels and short stories. He is also an established translator from English into Serbian. He is a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. He graduated from the University of Belgrade. He published the first collection of short stories Porodično vreme (Family Time) in 1973. He became better known to wider audience in 1982 with a volume Opis smrti (Description of Death) for which he got Ivo Andric's award. In 1991 he became the chair of the Federation of Jewish Communes of Yugoslavia, and worked on evacuation of the Jewish population from Sarajevo. In 1994, he moved with his family to Calgary in the Canadian province of Alberta, where he still lives. He continues to write and publish in the Serbian language. In the late eighties, Albahari initiated the first formal petition to legalize marijuana in Yugoslavia. His books were translated into several languages and five of them are available in English: Words Are Something Else (1996), Tsing (1997), Bait (2001), Gotz and Meyer (2003, UK) (2005, US) and Snow Man (2005). He has been contributing to Geist magazine.

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