Mother Doll

Author:   Katya Apekina
Publisher:   Harry N. Abrams
ISBN:  

9781419770968


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   25 March 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $47.52 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Mother Doll


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Katya Apekina
Publisher:   Harry N. Abrams
Imprint:   Harry N. Abrams
Dimensions:   Width: 13.70cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.80cm
Weight:   0.318kg
ISBN:  

9781419770968


ISBN 10:   1419770969
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   25 March 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"""A moving reflection on motherhood, immigration, identity, and the timeless connection between women across generations.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY, A Booklist for Mother's Day"" ""A sharp, strange, and surprisingly funny novel.""-- ""LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""A Russian doll of a novel, Katya Apekina traces the inherited beauty and trauma of four generations of Russian mothers and daughters in this hallucinatory, moving novel that has everything from psychic mediums to a chorus of grieving ghosts.""-- ""NYLON, Must-Reads of March 2024"" ""Apekina turns the multigenerational family saga on its head with this sharply original and surprisingly witty tale of a young woman in contemporary Los Angeles, her dying grandmother in New York City, and their ancestor in revolutionary Russia. The result is a provocative vision of a world in which past and present are not as neatly separated as they appear.""-- ""PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Apekina, who is a Russ­ian Jew­ish immi­grant her­self, brings wit and vir­tu­os­i­ty to this twisty tale of inter­gen­er­a­tional trauma.""-- ""THE JEWISH BOOK COUNCIL"" ""Apekina's keen portrayals of morally complicated women transcend any gimmickry, and her depictions of Petrograd in the early 20th century feel startlingly present. Like the Russian nesting dolls that inspired it, this novel reveals layer after layer of poignant delights.""-- ""KIRKUS REVIEWS, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Katya Apekina has a way of writing and managing the most devastating experiences of her characters with a lightness that never detracts from the profound weight of her bigger project . . . [H]er descriptions are so frank, so astute and so smart, I'm put at ease, thinking, 'Here I am in a world that has been observed and transmitted to me so keenly, it feels absolutely real.' But then she makes these audacious, dangerous moves in the story that are just boggling and fantastic, and I think, 'This is new, this is magical, and yet this feels absolutely real too.'""-- ""OTTESSA MOSHFEGH, Los Angeles Times"" ""Katya Apekina has crafted an enormously compassionate tale of family relationships, immigration, and war.""-- ""PUBLIC LIBRARIES ONLINE"" ""Katya Apekina is a writer of fiction who approaches dark and dense historical subject matters with fluid energy and wit, and with an imaginative current that sweeps her narratives into the realms of magic realism. Her second novel . . . is an even more expansive and fragmented family chronicle, split between twentieth-century Russia and contemporary America.""-- ""JESSICA ALMEREYDA, BOMB"" ""Masterful[...] Apekina [is] one of the most original novelists working today.""-- ""MICHIGAN QUARTERLY REVIEW"" ""Spellbinding . . . The novel's intricate game of loyalties [keeps] the reader's sympathies for the characters in flux. What's remarkable is how much we end up feeling for all of them.""-- ""BOOKFORUM"" ""Stories exist inside of other stories in this inventive novel, much like the vibrantly colorful nesting dolls that are a Russian tradition. Apekina's sentences are richly layered with Russian history and culture.""-- ""HADASSAH MAGAZINE"" ""[Mother Doll] is -- and I don't say this lightly -- a total triumph . . . It's the funniest book you will ever read about matrilineal intergenerational trauma, the Soviet orphanage to domestic terrorism pipeline, and unconventional family-making. I was deeply affected by how Apekina captured the ache of living between worlds, and how we pass that ache on to our children, whether we know it or not. And, like my very favorite books, the language is arresting.""-- ""RUTH MADIEVSKY, Kveller"" ""A startlingly sharp and affecting novel, exploring notions of motherhood, desire, and possession...Mother Doll displays a...defiance of norms as it deftly tangles with history and memory and generational trauma.""-- ""SHELFAWARENESS"" ""Apekina brilliantly balances the bizarre with the mundane . . . Mother Doll isn't a ghost story but a meticulously layered tale of fabulist historical fiction . . . The novel's unusual plot mechanics are sustained by [Apekina's] wry observations and wicked sense of humor.""-- ""LOS ANGELES TIMES"" ""Apekina's novel is not only a harrowing examination of generational trauma, but a damn funny one. Filled with sex, revolution, mediumship, and the occasional salient Russian historical figure, Mother Doll is a gripping read from the very first sentence.""-- ""VOGUE, The Best Books of 2024 So Far"" ""Delightful . . . This is an intergenerational family novel that manages to be mesmerizing in every storyline. A compelling combination of Russian Doll and Search Party.""--Marissa Higgins ""CHICAGO REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""I've been a fan of Katya Apekina since her first novel, the delightful and brilliant The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish. Her second, Mother Doll, is just as strange, wild, offbeat, and hilarious as her first, a profoundly moving story about maternity, inherited grief and joy, and the way that the children that mothers bear inside them must, in turn, bear the collective weight of their ancestors. I absolutely loved it.""-- ""LAUREN GROFF, New York Times bestselling author of Matrix and Fates and Furies"" ""Imagining the afterlife has resulted in unforgettable recent novels like George Saunders's Lincoln in the Bardo. Apekina's hallucinatory use of occult communications transforms historical facts and emotional trauma into a phantasmagorical fable of Zhenia's and Irina's spiritual journeys. Balancing raucous hilarity with embedded pain, it may be the year's weirdest one-of-a-kind read.""--Barbara Conaty ""LIBRARY JOURNAL"" ""In this remarkable novel, Katya Apekina unpacks a dizzying nested series of intergenerational traumas and intergenerational gifts. Spellbinding, hallucinatory, and very funny, Mother Doll feels at once deeply researched, deeply felt, and deeply imagined--a rare achievement.""-- ""ELIF BATUMAN, author of The Idiot, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize"" ""One cannot read Mother Doll without noticing how the genius of Apekina's narrative structure creates a ghostly tone throughout the novel's entirety. Hauntingly, one narrative ebbs into another, reinforcing the concept that generational trauma is inescapable until one consciously makes the decision to break its perpetual cycle. In this, Zhenia's story is necessary and inspiring, and as the novel opens discussions about the ever-changing meaning of family and home, the novel establishes itself as one of the most important pieces of Soviet �migr� literature to emerge in quite a while.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY"" ""Profoundly poignant and deeply moving, garnished with chortles and cackles along the way, Mother Doll is a novel whose heartbeat reverberates beyond its written words.""--Greg Mania ""STYLECASTER, Most Anticipated Books of 2024"" ""Triumphant . . . For those who enjoy diving into the metaphorical, Mother Doll holds a deep wisdom. [W]itty and compellingly relatable . . . [Apekina] hits on something beautifully innate: Who are we if not the histories of our ancestors?""-- ""BOOKPAGE"""


""A moving reflection on motherhood, immigration, identity, and the timeless connection between women across generations.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY, A Booklist for Mother's Day"" ""A sharp, strange, and surprisingly funny novel.""-- ""LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""A Russian doll of a novel, Katya Apekina traces the inherited beauty and trauma of four generations of Russian mothers and daughters in this hallucinatory, moving novel that has everything from psychic mediums to a chorus of grieving ghosts.""-- ""NYLON, Must-Reads of March 2024"" ""Apekina turns the multigenerational family saga on its head with this sharply original and surprisingly witty tale of a young woman in contemporary Los Angeles, her dying grandmother in New York City, and their ancestor in revolutionary Russia. The result is a provocative vision of a world in which past and present are not as neatly separated as they appear.""-- ""PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Apekina, who is a Russ­ian Jew­ish immi­grant her­self, brings wit and vir­tu­os­i­ty to this twisty tale of inter­gen­er­a­tional trauma.""-- ""THE JEWISH BOOK COUNCIL"" ""Apekina's keen portrayals of morally complicated women transcend any gimmickry, and her depictions of Petrograd in the early 20th century feel startlingly present. Like the Russian nesting dolls that inspired it, this novel reveals layer after layer of poignant delights.""-- ""KIRKUS REVIEWS, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Katya Apekina has a way of writing and managing the most devastating experiences of her characters with a lightness that never detracts from the profound weight of her bigger project . . . [H]er descriptions are so frank, so astute and so smart, I'm put at ease, thinking, 'Here I am in a world that has been observed and transmitted to me so keenly, it feels absolutely real.' But then she makes these audacious, dangerous moves in the story that are just boggling and fantastic, and I think, 'This is new, this is magical, and yet this feels absolutely real too.'""-- ""OTTESSA MOSHFEGH, Los Angeles Times"" ""Katya Apekina has crafted an enormously compassionate tale of family relationships, immigration, and war.""-- ""PUBLIC LIBRARIES ONLINE"" ""Katya Apekina is a writer of fiction who approaches dark and dense historical subject matters with fluid energy and wit, and with an imaginative current that sweeps her narratives into the realms of magic realism. Her second novel . . . is an even more expansive and fragmented family chronicle, split between twentieth-century Russia and contemporary America.""-- ""JESSICA ALMEREYDA, BOMB"" ""Masterful[...] Apekina [is] one of the most original novelists working today.""-- ""MICHIGAN QUARTERLY REVIEW"" ""Spellbinding . . . The novel's intricate game of loyalties [keeps] the reader's sympathies for the characters in flux. What's remarkable is how much we end up feeling for all of them.""-- ""BOOKFORUM"" ""Stories exist inside of other stories in this inventive novel, much like the vibrantly colorful nesting dolls that are a Russian tradition. Apekina's sentences are richly layered with Russian history and culture.""-- ""HADASSAH MAGAZINE"" ""[Mother Doll] is -- and I don't say this lightly -- a total triumph . . . It's the funniest book you will ever read about matrilineal intergenerational trauma, the Soviet orphanage to domestic terrorism pipeline, and unconventional family-making. I was deeply affected by how Apekina captured the ache of living between worlds, and how we pass that ache on to our children, whether we know it or not. And, like my very favorite books, the language is arresting.""-- ""RUTH MADIEVSKY, Kveller"" ""A startlingly sharp and affecting novel, exploring notions of motherhood, desire, and possession...Mother Doll displays a...defiance of norms as it deftly tangles with history and memory and generational trauma.""-- ""SHELFAWARENESS"" ""Apekina brilliantly balances the bizarre with the mundane . . . Mother Doll isn't a ghost story but a meticulously layered tale of fabulist historical fiction . . . The novel's unusual plot mechanics are sustained by [Apekina's] wry observations and wicked sense of humor.""-- ""LOS ANGELES TIMES"" ""Apekina's novel is not only a harrowing examination of generational trauma, but a damn funny one. Filled with sex, revolution, mediumship, and the occasional salient Russian historical figure, Mother Doll is a gripping read from the very first sentence.""-- ""VOGUE, The Best Books of 2024 So Far"" ""Delightful . . . This is an intergenerational family novel that manages to be mesmerizing in every storyline. A compelling combination of Russian Doll and Search Party.""--Marissa Higgins ""CHICAGO REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""I've been a fan of Katya Apekina since her first novel, the delightful and brilliant The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish. Her second, Mother Doll, is just as strange, wild, offbeat, and hilarious as her first, a profoundly moving story about maternity, inherited grief and joy, and the way that the children that mothers bear inside them must, in turn, bear the collective weight of their ancestors. I absolutely loved it.""-- ""LAUREN GROFF, New York Times bestselling author of Matrix and Fates and Furies"" ""Imagining the afterlife has resulted in unforgettable recent novels like George Saunders's Lincoln in the Bardo. Apekina's hallucinatory use of occult communications transforms historical facts and emotional trauma into a phantasmagorical fable of Zhenia's and Irina's spiritual journeys. Balancing raucous hilarity with embedded pain, it may be the year's weirdest one-of-a-kind read.""--Barbara Conaty ""LIBRARY JOURNAL"" ""In this remarkable novel, Katya Apekina unpacks a dizzying nested series of intergenerational traumas and intergenerational gifts. Spellbinding, hallucinatory, and very funny, Mother Doll feels at once deeply researched, deeply felt, and deeply imagined--a rare achievement.""-- ""ELIF BATUMAN, author of The Idiot, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize"" ""One cannot read Mother Doll without noticing how the genius of Apekina's narrative structure creates a ghostly tone throughout the novel's entirety. Hauntingly, one narrative ebbs into another, reinforcing the concept that generational trauma is inescapable until one consciously makes the decision to break its perpetual cycle. In this, Zhenia's story is necessary and inspiring, and as the novel opens discussions about the ever-changing meaning of family and home, the novel establishes itself as one of the most important pieces of Soviet émigré literature to emerge in quite a while.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY"" ""Profoundly poignant and deeply moving, garnished with chortles and cackles along the way, Mother Doll is a novel whose heartbeat reverberates beyond its written words.""--Greg Mania ""STYLECASTER, Most Anticipated Books of 2024"" ""Triumphant . . . For those who enjoy diving into the metaphorical, Mother Doll holds a deep wisdom. [W]itty and compellingly relatable . . . [Apekina] hits on something beautifully innate: Who are we if not the histories of our ancestors?""-- ""BOOKPAGE""


""Sprawling and very funny.""-- ""AIR/LIGHT"" ""A moving reflection on motherhood, immigration, identity, and the timeless connection between women across generations.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY, A Booklist for Mother's Day"" ""A sharp, strange, and surprisingly funny novel.""-- ""LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""A Russian doll of a novel, Katya Apekina traces the inherited beauty and trauma of four generations of Russian mothers and daughters in this hallucinatory, moving novel that has everything from psychic mediums to a chorus of grieving ghosts.""-- ""NYLON, Must-Reads of March 2024"" ""Apekina turns the multigenerational family saga on its head with this sharply original and surprisingly witty tale of a young woman in contemporary Los Angeles, her dying grandmother in New York City, and their ancestor in revolutionary Russia. The result is a provocative vision of a world in which past and present are not as neatly separated as they appear.""-- ""PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Apekina, who is a Russ­ian Jew­ish immi­grant her­self, brings wit and vir­tu­os­i­ty to this twisty tale of inter­gen­er­a­tional trauma.""-- ""THE JEWISH BOOK COUNCIL"" ""Apekina's keen portrayals of morally complicated women transcend any gimmickry, and her depictions of Petrograd in the early 20th century feel startlingly present. Like the Russian nesting dolls that inspired it, this novel reveals layer after layer of poignant delights.""-- ""KIRKUS REVIEWS, STARRED REVIEW"" ""Katya Apekina has a way of writing and managing the most devastating experiences of her characters with a lightness that never detracts from the profound weight of her bigger project . . . [H]er descriptions are so frank, so astute and so smart, I'm put at ease, thinking, 'Here I am in a world that has been observed and transmitted to me so keenly, it feels absolutely real.' But then she makes these audacious, dangerous moves in the story that are just boggling and fantastic, and I think, 'This is new, this is magical, and yet this feels absolutely real too.'""-- ""OTTESSA MOSHFEGH, Los Angeles Times"" ""Katya Apekina has crafted an enormously compassionate tale of family relationships, immigration, and war.""-- ""PUBLIC LIBRARIES ONLINE"" ""Katya Apekina is a writer of fiction who approaches dark and dense historical subject matters with fluid energy and wit, and with an imaginative current that sweeps her narratives into the realms of magic realism. Her second novel . . . is an even more expansive and fragmented family chronicle, split between twentieth-century Russia and contemporary America.""-- ""JESSICA ALMEREYDA, BOMB"" ""Masterful[...] Apekina [is] one of the most original novelists working today.""-- ""MICHIGAN QUARTERLY REVIEW"" ""Spellbinding . . . The novel's intricate game of loyalties [keeps] the reader's sympathies for the characters in flux. What's remarkable is how much we end up feeling for all of them.""-- ""BOOKFORUM"" ""Stories exist inside of other stories in this inventive novel, much like the vibrantly colorful nesting dolls that are a Russian tradition. Apekina's sentences are richly layered with Russian history and culture.""-- ""HADASSAH MAGAZINE"" ""[Mother Doll] is -- and I don't say this lightly -- a total triumph . . . It's the funniest book you will ever read about matrilineal intergenerational trauma, the Soviet orphanage to domestic terrorism pipeline, and unconventional family-making. I was deeply affected by how Apekina captured the ache of living between worlds, and how we pass that ache on to our children, whether we know it or not. And, like my very favorite books, the language is arresting.""-- ""RUTH MADIEVSKY, Kveller"" ""A startlingly sharp and affecting novel, exploring notions of motherhood, desire, and possession...Mother Doll displays a...defiance of norms as it deftly tangles with history and memory and generational trauma.""-- ""SHELFAWARENESS"" ""Apekina brilliantly balances the bizarre with the mundane . . . Mother Doll isn't a ghost story but a meticulously layered tale of fabulist historical fiction . . . The novel's unusual plot mechanics are sustained by [Apekina's] wry observations and wicked sense of humor.""-- ""LOS ANGELES TIMES"" ""Apekina's novel is not only a harrowing examination of generational trauma, but a damn funny one. Filled with sex, revolution, mediumship, and the occasional salient Russian historical figure, Mother Doll is a gripping read from the very first sentence.""-- ""VOGUE, The Best Books of 2024 So Far"" ""Delightful . . . This is an intergenerational family novel that manages to be mesmerizing in every storyline. A compelling combination of Russian Doll and Search Party.""--Marissa Higgins ""CHICAGO REVIEW OF BOOKS"" ""I've been a fan of Katya Apekina since her first novel, the delightful and brilliant The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish. Her second, Mother Doll, is just as strange, wild, offbeat, and hilarious as her first, a profoundly moving story about maternity, inherited grief and joy, and the way that the children that mothers bear inside them must, in turn, bear the collective weight of their ancestors. I absolutely loved it.""-- ""LAUREN GROFF, New York Times bestselling author of Matrix and Fates and Furies"" ""Imagining the afterlife has resulted in unforgettable recent novels like George Saunders's Lincoln in the Bardo. Apekina's hallucinatory use of occult communications transforms historical facts and emotional trauma into a phantasmagorical fable of Zhenia's and Irina's spiritual journeys. Balancing raucous hilarity with embedded pain, it may be the year's weirdest one-of-a-kind read.""--Barbara Conaty ""LIBRARY JOURNAL"" ""In this remarkable novel, Katya Apekina unpacks a dizzying nested series of intergenerational traumas and intergenerational gifts. Spellbinding, hallucinatory, and very funny, Mother Doll feels at once deeply researched, deeply felt, and deeply imagined--a rare achievement.""-- ""ELIF BATUMAN, author of The Idiot, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize"" ""One cannot read Mother Doll without noticing how the genius of Apekina's narrative structure creates a ghostly tone throughout the novel's entirety. Hauntingly, one narrative ebbs into another, reinforcing the concept that generational trauma is inescapable until one consciously makes the decision to break its perpetual cycle. In this, Zhenia's story is necessary and inspiring, and as the novel opens discussions about the ever-changing meaning of family and home, the novel establishes itself as one of the most important pieces of Soviet émigré literature to emerge in quite a while.""-- ""WORLD LITERATURE TODAY"" ""Profoundly poignant and deeply moving, garnished with chortles and cackles along the way, Mother Doll is a novel whose heartbeat reverberates beyond its written words.""--Greg Mania ""STYLECASTER, Most Anticipated Books of 2024"" ""Triumphant . . . For those who enjoy diving into the metaphorical, Mother Doll holds a deep wisdom. [W]itty and compellingly relatable . . . [Apekina] hits on something beautifully innate: Who are we if not the histories of our ancestors?""-- ""BOOKPAGE""


Author Information

Katya Apekina is a novelist, screenwriter, and translator. Her debut novel, The Deeper the Water, the Uglier the Fish, was named a Best Book of 2018 by Kirkus, Buzzfeed, Literary Hub, and others, was a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize, and has been translated into Spanish, Catalan, French, German, and Italian. She is the recipient of an Elizabeth George grant, an Olin Fellowship, the Alena Wilson prize, and a Third Year Fiction Fellowship from Washington University in St. Louis, where she did her MFA. She has done residences at VCCA, Playa, Ucross, Art Omi: Writing, and Foundation Jan Michalski in Switzerland. Born in Moscow, she moved to the US when she was three years old and currently lives in Los Angeles. Mother Doll is her second novel.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

RGJUNE2025

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List