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The Light of Seven Days

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Living with her Babby after her parents' death, ten-year-old Dinah Ash is invited to train at Leningrad's legendary Vaganova Ballet School. In the world of elite dance, she works hard, falls in love, and weathers the Soviet Union's ubiquitous antisemitism, but despite an impressive talent, she quickly learns that dancers of her "profile" don't make prima ballerinas.

Love of Leningrad, ballet, friends, family, and books sustain Dinah until history intervenes. The Soviet war in Afghanistan, the rise of perestroika, and a re-emergence of Nazism leave her vulnerable and exposed. Realizing escape is her only option, she applies for refugee status in America.

Dinah's adjustment to life in the US is a test as much of her identity as of her perseverance. Is who she is something Dinah can forge on her own? Or is identity imposed by upbringing, public opinion, and the myths of our cultures? As Dinah struggles with the questions of religion, race, and worth, her choices and the people she encounters will determine whether the dream of a better life can survive the weight of the past.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 31, 2023
      Adams’s bracing debut novel is both an indictment and a backhanded appreciation of late-20th-century America from the point of view of an émigré from the Soviet Union. Ten-year-old Dinah Ash is living with her grandmother Babby in Leningrad in the 1970s when she’s chosen for the prestigious Vaganova School of ballet. She trains for years, and falls head over heels for a fellow dancer, but once she joins the prestigious Kirov ballet company at 17 she learns she will not thrive there for one reason: she is a Jew. Her boyfriend is sent to Afghanistan to fight the mujahideen, Babby dies, and life under Gorbachev in the renamed St. Petersburg becomes rampant with “nationalism. Rising, rabid, spreading ethno-nationalism, anti-Semitism, anti-anything-not-Russian-ism.” Dinah resolves to leave and ends up in Philadelphia, where her first years are miserable: working at a Russian grocery store, she pines for her homeland, which, in spite of the deprivations, still feels richer and deeper in her memory than life surrounded by strip-mall ugliness and different forms of racism. She eventually joins a dance company, only to become gravely ill. In the book’s first chapter, Dinah reveals she has a virulent form of cancer and foretells the deaths of most of the other Russian characters after the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. Adams’s affecting insight into their adopted home and the Russia they left—Adams emigrated from the old Soviet Union, too—is well worth the troika ride.

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