The Green Crow
By (Author) Kristine Ulberga
Translated by Zanete Vevere Pasqualini
Peter Owen Publishers
Peter Owen Publishers
1st August 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
Feminism and feminist theory
891.9334
Winner of Raimonds Gerkens Prize 2012
Paperback
256
Width 138mm, Height 210mm
'I want to throw a stone, hit my husband on the head you never know what a crazy person will do next, and, anyway, they can't be held accountable and you can't take offence at their actions.'
Part of the Peter Owen World Series: Baltics. A contemporary Latvian classic and feminist One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Kristine Ulberga's The Green Crow is a novel about an institutionalized woman coming to terms with her lifelong hallucinations of a giant, garrulous green crow who appears at the most trying times of her life.
Institutionalized in an asylum, a woman with a record of hallucinations commits her life story to paper. She records, from the age of six, her earliest memories of a drunken and abusive father, the strange men her mother introduced to repair the family, the imaginary forest to which she would run for safety and, of course, the enormous talking green crow who appeared when she most needed him.The green crow is a conceited, boisterous creature who follows the novel's nameless protagonist throughout her life, until the day that the crow's presence begins to embarrass her. Confined to a tedious domestic life, she is desperate to hide the crow's very existence. Failing to do so, she winds up in a psychiatric hospital. Can she repress and renounce her acerbic, sharp-beaked daemon - or learn to love herself, bird and all
Kristne Ulberga (b. 1979, Riga) is a Latvian novelist best known for her young adult novels 'I Dont Read Books' ('Es grmatas nelasu', 2008, ), 'The Virtual Angel' ('Virtulais eelis', 2009) and 'I Dont Read Books 2' ('Es grmatas nelasu 2', 2010). Her first novel for adults, 'The Green Crow' ('Za vrna', 2018), was first published in 2012 and won the Raimonds Gerkens Prize and the Annual Latvian Literature Prize.