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Lost in Mother Russia
A Memoir
by Jill McDowell
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Overview


Lose yourself in Mother Russia as this directionally-challenged memoirist narrates episodes from her two-year stay in the land of her ancestors. Schastliviye puteschestviya! Happy travels!



BOOK REVIEWS

Reviewed by Maria Victoria Beltran for Readers' Favorite

Lost in Mother Russia: A Memoir by Jill McDowell is an intimate look at Russia set in the middle 1990s. The author, an ESL teacher who teaches at Moscow State University and at the school in the Japanese Embassy, decides to search for her roots in the remote village of Norka. Together with a colleague, they find themselves in the thousand-year-old village of Suzdal, getting lost in some remote backroad 350 kilometers away from Moscow, going to Estonia, to Warsaw, to Moscow and back. And this is in December when the temperature reaches thirty-nine degrees below zero. Throw in the notorious Russian red tape and an array of interesting characters and the result is a wonderfully wacky adventure.

Jill McDowell's Lost in Mother Russia: A Memoir is a funny, informative and highly entertaining trip in the vast snowy expanse of Russia. The memoir unfolds innocently enough but quickly becomes a series of events that are both hilarious and unfortunate. Driven by the desire to trace her roots, McDowell ends up writing a treasure of a memoir. Her writing style is direct, simple and meticulously descriptive. One can almost feel the chill of the wintry weather and the desire to rave and rant at embassy officials. And in the face of what seems like exasperating experiences, she never loses her sense of humor and that's what makes this memoir a gem of a book. This is a book that definitely deserves a precious space in your bookshelf. Have a nice trip!

Review from "Ageless Writers" -- Brilliant! I couldn’t stop smiling all throughout the story. What’s not to love about our heroine? She’s optimistic, smart, brave and armed with great resolution. Also, she has a subtle kind of humor, well-expressed through her way of telling the story. I simply loved the story, and everything about it. We have a mistreated heroine and an antagonist that gets what he deserves in the end, a beautiful setting of a hellish winter, and an important lesson to learn for those willing to. And, of course, the storytelling is top-notch. Thank you, dear writer, for a great read!


Read more

Description


Lose yourself in Mother Russia as this directionally-challenged memoirist narrates episodes from her two-year stay in the land of her ancestors. Schastliviye puteschestviya! Happy travels! From Brits to bugs to bureaucracy, you'll accompany author Jill McDowell as she visits the 1000-year-old village of Suzdal on Christmas morning when the weather is a nippy 39 degrees below zero. You'll follow along as she traces her family history in Norka, a Volga-German settlement established during the reign of Catherine the Great, and join in as she and her Japanese Embassy colleagues lose their way on the dusty backroads 350 kilometers from Moscow. Experience the miles of red tape at the Russian Embassy in Estonia, and meet a cast of unlikely characters aboard the Polonaise as McDowell journeys by train from Warsaw to Moscow and—with a stroke of good luck—back again. This entertaining travel memoir will take you on a humorous journey through Eastern Europe as the author researches her ancestry, teaches ESL to Russian and Japanese speakers, and gets lost in the vast and snowy expanse of Russia.
Read more

About the author


Jill McDowell was born in Canada, spent 50 years in Southern California and—hoping to see rain once more before she dies—has settled in the Pacific Northwest. The weather has not disappointed. During her freshman year at the University of Washington she performed on stage at the Showboat Theater; toured with a Shakespearean production directed by Duncan Ross, a noteworthy figure with the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School; and worked as an on-camera announcer at the local Seattle PBS channel. More recently, in her role as a grandmother presenting a plateful of cookies to megastar Drake—part of a skit the pair performed prior to a nationally telecast NBA Awards show—she, at the pinnacle of fame, chose to give up her barely-established career as a commercial actor. She likewise ended her partially successful attempt at becoming the oldest living voiceover actor in Southern California where she voiced a 45-year-old elephant—typecasting at its best. During her half century in the workforce, she toiled as a publicity director at a San Francisco TV station; a medical transcriptionist for physicians whose speech was often more difficult to decode than their handwriting; a government employee; and as a starving artist with Peaceable Beasts, her own art-rubber-stamp company. She spent two years (1995-1996) teaching English at Moscow State University as well as at the Japanese Embassy School in Moscow, thereby affording her a tri-cultural experience. Armed with a 100-year-old map and the exceptional navigational skills of a personable driver, she found her way to Norka, the tiny Russian village where her ancestors lived from 1763 to 1900. She taught English as a Second Language (ESL) for 35 years, and recently retired from Glendale Community College in Southern California, where she was an assistant adjunct ESL professor. In addition to the Czech Republic and Russia, she has also travelled to Poland, Lithuania, Estonia and Belarus; Finland, France, Germany, Italy and England; and to most of the provinces in Canada. When not writing, she enjoys classical music. Mozart—whose beautifully maintained piano she saw and admired in Prague—remains her favorite composer.
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Book details

Genre:BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY

Subgenre:Personal Memoirs

Language:English

Pages:100

eBook ISBN:9781543995947

Paperback ISBN:9781543995930


Overview


Lose yourself in Mother Russia as this directionally-challenged memoirist narrates episodes from her two-year stay in the land of her ancestors. Schastliviye puteschestviya! Happy travels!



BOOK REVIEWS

Reviewed by Maria Victoria Beltran for Readers' Favorite

Lost in Mother Russia: A Memoir by Jill McDowell is an intimate look at Russia set in the middle 1990s. The author, an ESL teacher who teaches at Moscow State University and at the school in the Japanese Embassy, decides to search for her roots in the remote village of Norka. Together with a colleague, they find themselves in the thousand-year-old village of Suzdal, getting lost in some remote backroad 350 kilometers away from Moscow, going to Estonia, to Warsaw, to Moscow and back. And this is in December when the temperature reaches thirty-nine degrees below zero. Throw in the notorious Russian red tape and an array of interesting characters and the result is a wonderfully wacky adventure.

Jill McDowell's Lost in Mother Russia: A Memoir is a funny, informative and highly entertaining trip in the vast snowy expanse of Russia. The memoir unfolds innocently enough but quickly becomes a series of events that are both hilarious and unfortunate. Driven by the desire to trace her roots, McDowell ends up writing a treasure of a memoir. Her writing style is direct, simple and meticulously descriptive. One can almost feel the chill of the wintry weather and the desire to rave and rant at embassy officials. And in the face of what seems like exasperating experiences, she never loses her sense of humor and that's what makes this memoir a gem of a book. This is a book that definitely deserves a precious space in your bookshelf. Have a nice trip!

Review from "Ageless Writers" -- Brilliant! I couldn’t stop smiling all throughout the story. What’s not to love about our heroine? She’s optimistic, smart, brave and armed with great resolution. Also, she has a subtle kind of humor, well-expressed through her way of telling the story. I simply loved the story, and everything about it. We have a mistreated heroine and an antagonist that gets what he deserves in the end, a beautiful setting of a hellish winter, and an important lesson to learn for those willing to. And, of course, the storytelling is top-notch. Thank you, dear writer, for a great read!


Read more

Description


Lose yourself in Mother Russia as this directionally-challenged memoirist narrates episodes from her two-year stay in the land of her ancestors. Schastliviye puteschestviya! Happy travels! From Brits to bugs to bureaucracy, you'll accompany author Jill McDowell as she visits the 1000-year-old village of Suzdal on Christmas morning when the weather is a nippy 39 degrees below zero. You'll follow along as she traces her family history in Norka, a Volga-German settlement established during the reign of Catherine the Great, and join in as she and her Japanese Embassy colleagues lose their way on the dusty backroads 350 kilometers from Moscow. Experience the miles of red tape at the Russian Embassy in Estonia, and meet a cast of unlikely characters aboard the Polonaise as McDowell journeys by train from Warsaw to Moscow and—with a stroke of good luck—back again. This entertaining travel memoir will take you on a humorous journey through Eastern Europe as the author researches her ancestry, teaches ESL to Russian and Japanese speakers, and gets lost in the vast and snowy expanse of Russia.

Read more

About the author


Jill McDowell was born in Canada, spent 50 years in Southern California and—hoping to see rain once more before she dies—has settled in the Pacific Northwest. The weather has not disappointed. During her freshman year at the University of Washington she performed on stage at the Showboat Theater; toured with a Shakespearean production directed by Duncan Ross, a noteworthy figure with the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School; and worked as an on-camera announcer at the local Seattle PBS channel. More recently, in her role as a grandmother presenting a plateful of cookies to megastar Drake—part of a skit the pair performed prior to a nationally telecast NBA Awards show—she, at the pinnacle of fame, chose to give up her barely-established career as a commercial actor. She likewise ended her partially successful attempt at becoming the oldest living voiceover actor in Southern California where she voiced a 45-year-old elephant—typecasting at its best. During her half century in the workforce, she toiled as a publicity director at a San Francisco TV station; a medical transcriptionist for physicians whose speech was often more difficult to decode than their handwriting; a government employee; and as a starving artist with Peaceable Beasts, her own art-rubber-stamp company. She spent two years (1995-1996) teaching English at Moscow State University as well as at the Japanese Embassy School in Moscow, thereby affording her a tri-cultural experience. Armed with a 100-year-old map and the exceptional navigational skills of a personable driver, she found her way to Norka, the tiny Russian village where her ancestors lived from 1763 to 1900. She taught English as a Second Language (ESL) for 35 years, and recently retired from Glendale Community College in Southern California, where she was an assistant adjunct ESL professor. In addition to the Czech Republic and Russia, she has also travelled to Poland, Lithuania, Estonia and Belarus; Finland, France, Germany, Italy and England; and to most of the provinces in Canada. When not writing, she enjoys classical music. Mozart—whose beautifully maintained piano she saw and admired in Prague—remains her favorite composer.
Read more

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