Member Reviews
I really liked how this story was told, it had just the right mix of sad and sweet, beauty and ugliness, mundane and fantastical, to make the village come alive in vivid detail. It was cozy and charming to be escorted into this world and spend time with its characters.
Anatolia Sevoyants, fifty-eight years old, lived in Maran, an isolated Armenian village. Convinced she had a fatal illness, she pulled her "grave clothes out of the wardrobe,...opens windows so her soul...could free itself and dart heaven bound...". However, she easily fell asleep then "soaked up the morning sun with her whole being".
Life in Maran had not been easy for Anatolia. She was married for eighteen unhappy years to a man who was callous and indifferent. Reading was her only outlet. Having become the village librarian, she decorated the library by adding colorful curtains and bench cushions creating a "coziness and lightness...reminiscent of a reading room in a well-tended conservatory".
Maran used to be a farming community containing arguably five hundred households. On Saturdays, villagers gathered to barter their products. "You might receive a knife for ten hen's eggs...". Gypsy caravans traveled up the perilously narrow slope of the Manish-kar mountains in order to trade. Plagued by earthquakes, war, famine and drought, many villagers chose to move down to the valley. "The village clung onto Manish-kar's shoulder like a burdensome weight, pointless and forgotten by everyone", that is, except for the older citizens who didn't want to leave the land settled by their ancestors. "Every Maranian knew the ins and outs of their fellow villagers...their misfortunes, hurts, illnesses, and rare, but very long-awaited joys...Anatolia couldn't figure out why ...Vasily...[wanted]...to ruin that measured way of life...".
"Three Apples Fell from the Sky" by Narine Abgaryan is a literary novel describing the trials and tribulations of a dwindling population in a remote Armenian village. The villagers were congenial, sympathetic, cantankerous and loved to gossip. Their insular world was connected to the world at large via an ancient telegraph wire. Maran's residents engage the reader by sharing their memories, feats of resilience, bouts of stubbornness and love of humor. An excellent tome I highly recommend.
Thank you Oneworld Publications and Net Galley for the opportunity to read and review "Three Apples Fell from the Sky".