Lewitscharoff, Sibylle 1954-

Apostoloff Sibylle Lewitscharoff; translated by Katy Derbyshire - 279 S. 21 cm - German list .

"Gone, finito The End, I say. A father who puts an end to it all before he wears down the whole family deserves more praise than damnation. Two sisters travel to Sofia-- in a convoy of luxury limousines arranged by a fellow Bulgarian exile-- to bury their less-than-beloved father. Like tourists, they are chauffeured by the ever-charming Ruben Apostoloff-- one sister in the back seat, one in the passenger seat, one sharp-tongued and aggressive, the other polite and considerate. In a caustic voice, Apostoloff shows them the treasures of his beloved country: the peacock-eye pottery (which contains poisonous dye), the Black Sea coast (which is utterly destroyed), the architecture (a twentieth-century crime). His attempts to win them over seem doomed to fail, as the sisters' Bulgarian heritage is a heavy burden-- their father, a successful doctor and melancholy immigrant, appears in their dreams still dragging the rope with which he hanged himself" -- from publisher's web site


English translation from German

9780857420886 0857420887

2014356097


Automobile travel--Bulgaria--Fiction
Sisters--Fiction
Fathers and daughters--Fiction
Fathers--Death--Fiction


Bulgaria--Fiction


Fiktionale Darstellung

MLCS 2014/01660 (P)

[Fic] 830 B