Sana Krasikov, photo by Alexis Calice |
Sana Krasikov is the author of the novel The Patriots, which focuses on a family with ties to both Russia and the United States. She also has written the story collection One More Year, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including The New Yorker and The Atlantic.
Q: How did you come up with
the idea for The Patriots, and for the family you describe in the book?
A: The book grew out of stories
that a family friend told me about his mother. She was a bright, gutsy young
woman who left Brooklyn during the Depression and headed to Moscow, which was then
considered “the Paris of the ‘30s.”
For many foreigners, Moscow
seemed liberated and avant-garde and economically vigorous in ways that America
no longer was. Much of that was, of course, a PR illusion.
Tim, our friend, spent a
chunk of his childhood in state orphanages, before being reunited with his mom
when she returned from the Gulag (his dad, also an American, perished in
prison). The first thing Tim recalled about the reunion was realizing that his
mother spoke with a heavy American accent. That story became the first scene in
the book.
The modern-day storylines
(set in 2008) came from my own experiences living in Moscow. But I became
obsessed with this woman, because her story was the complete inversion of my
own – turning her back on America instead of arriving as I did, to embrace the
American dream. As I wrote, she began to emerge as this appealingly compromised
figure.
From chapter to chapter I
wanted the reader to be left wondering who she really is: an ambitious idealist
trying to preserve her humanity under impossible circumstances, or a
self-deluding collaborator capable of betraying the trust of those who cared about
her?
I wanted to show the
Stalinist world though an American’s perspective: how was this Brooklyn girl going
to navigate a world of propaganda, fake news, and political correctness gone
awry?
Q: The story is told from the
perspectives of various characters, and jumps from one time period to another.
Did you write the chapters in the order in which they appear, or did you move
things around as you wrote?
A: I actually wrote it in a
more chronological order, with Florence’s story starting in Brooklyn College
and then us following her to Cleveland where she falls in love with Sergey, who
lures her to Moscow.
But a friend read the
manuscript and suggested I start Florence’s story right aboard the ship heading
to Russia, then looping around so we could understand what brought her there.
In the initial version, her
son Julian narrated much more of her story. But as I entered her world I became
bolder about using the omniscient voice – which felt to me more appropriate. It
allowed me to pull back the curtain to show the bigger forces coming into play in
people’s lives. It’s impossible to know how to tell the story until you’re telling
it.
Q: In a New York Times review
back in January, Nathaniel Rich wrote, "Novelists choose the period they
write about, but they can’t choose the period in which they’re read. Sana
Krasikov’s debut novel was composed in the previous era, but its official
publication coincides with the presidential inauguration...Krasikov had no way
of knowing that her novel would be published just as America is witnessing the
ascension of a ruler who calls for jailing his opponents, proposes to weaken
the First Amendment and uncritically quotes Russian propaganda. But this turn
of events gives urgency to her main theme — the insidious influence of
totalitarianism on the lives of those trapped under its boot." What do you
think your novel says about the complicated dynamics between the United States
and Russia?
A: A number of reviewers
noted that the book’s themes felt almost eerily relevant to our time, and that
wasn’t entirely accidental. It’s true I couldn't predict Trump’s rise, or
Russia’s involvement in our election system, but while writing the book I did
feel I was writing into a stark political divide that was heading toward some
kind of collision.
So many of the social “isms”
we see today -- class tension, race anxiety, populist rhetoric, political
polarization -- were flourishing during “the crisis of capitalism” of the
1930s.
Nativist politicians like
Huey Long and orators like Father Coughlin were mastering a novel blend of
hyperbole, humor and vitriol and broadcasting it to millions of disgruntled
Americans through a new form of popular media – the radio. (People spoke of the
dangers of radio then as they now speak of Facebook.)
By setting the drama in this
period, I wanted to offer the reader new perspectives on contemporary problems.
Like when Florence is working at a university where those who have “regressive”
political beliefs are cornered into displays of self-correction and public
apology.
It seemed to echo debates
we’re having now in America about how far universities should go to protect
politically unpopular speech, and how far students should be able to lay
professors low for their political errors.
And yes, our old rival is
once again at our doorstep. But something else is happening, too. With the initial
bromance between Trump and Putin and an ongoing investigation into the
entanglement between the Kremlin and Trump’s staff, we are witnessing another
side of our ancient relationship: collusion under the cover of enmity.
In the 1930s, the American
press was laying a drumbeat against the “Red Menace,” even as American
industrialists (and politicians) struck million-dollar deals with the
Bolsheviks, who were eager to industrialize Russia along American lines. Whole
districts of Moscow were built with American steel and American know-how.
This business relationship
between public rivals forms the backdrop for Florence’s story: she first goes
to the Soviet Union because of her encounter with a Russian engineer who has
come on one of these industrialization contracts. But as the collusion deepens,
so will its consequences for Florence’s future.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s
admiration for Joseph Stalin extended to the point that FDR purged his circle
of advisors of Russia-critics and appointed an obliging ambassador — Joseph
Davies — to man the embassy in Moscow.
Davies and his wife, Marjorie
Merriweather Post, heir to a cereal box fortune, said of Stalin’s show trials
that they were “mostly just,” and even screened the latest American films for
the secret police in the embassy’s private theater.
Florence’s discovery of this
complicity forms a deepening level of intrigue in the plot. When Florence bangs
on the gates of the American embassy, shouting,
“I’m an American citizen!” the gates remain closed.
Like hundreds of Americans,
she’s left behind to fend for herself. But unlike others sacrificed on the
altar of political ends, she’s a survivor who lives to tell the tale.
Q: Who are some of your
favorite writers?
A: Richard Yates, Alice
Munro, Lev Tolstoy, Vasily Grossman, Pelevin, Susan Orlean, Michael Pollan – I
probably read as much non-fiction as fiction. E.L. Doctorow’s work – his way of
integrating history with fiction – had a big impact on The Patriots. Right now
I’m reading David Means’ stories, and Ottessa Moshfegh, and Akhil Sharma.
Q: What are you working on
now?
A: A new novel, which also
has an historic element, but more recent – taking a look at the political
transition from the Carter to the Reagan eras. It also involves a 40-year-old
grandmother who goes through a second adolescence.
Q: Anything else we should
know?
A: Yes! My husband, Gregory
Warner, just wrapped up a new podcast called “Rough Translation,” about those
awkward moments we face when we find ourselves between cultures. It’s part of
NPR’s podcast family.
I helped work on some of the
episodes, which I think give listeners that soul satisfaction of reading a really
good short story. Listening is the new reading, or so I hear.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Sana Krasikov will be participating in the Lessans Family Literary Series at the Bender JCC of Greater Washington on November 5.
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