"Like this maddening, electrifying book--equal parts biography, adventure yarn, and ode--the Russian writer and sometime political agitator Eduard Limonov is a shape-shifter. Born in 1943, he has been a foundry worker and a poet in the U.S.S.R.; a bum and a butler in New York; a literary star in Paris; a fighter in the Balkans; the leader of an ultra-nationalist party in Moscow. Carrère recognizes the risk of being seduced by his subject''s outsize life and macho self-mythologizing. ''There were times when I hated Limonov,'' he confesses, but he is drawn to Limonov''s determination to be ''a hero, a truly great man.
'' Carrère''s prose has a brash punk energy; his refusal to flatten Limonov with easy judgment gives the book its life." -- The New Yorker "While tracking the amazing, improbable life of Ukrainian writer, adventurer and would-be revolutionary Eduard Limonov, Limonov interweaves a social and political history of post-Stalinist Russia, chunks of Carrère''s autobiography and a hodgepodge of reflections on art, sex, ambition, the punk aesthetic, fascism, mysticism and old age.[Because Carrère] possesses such an intimately engaging narrative voice, Limonov feels almost nonchalant yet is, in fact, quite artfully orchestrated and completely riveting." Michael Dirda, The Washington Post Book World "For those of us who didn''t grow up passing around copies of Limonov''s ''fictional memoir,'' It''s Me, Eddie , we have Emmanuel Carrère . and his jaunty, raunchy Limonov , which the publisher calls a pseudobiography, to fill in the colorful outlines of the old eccentric''s life . There''s something very Russian about the Eddie that Carrère gives us, a man who laughs at life before it has a chance to bring him low, who masters it by exalting himself above all others. He is the antihero we came to know ages ago, in "Eugene Onegin" and "A Hero of Our Time," but this scoundrel is so much better at relishing his life, so much better at entertaining his reader. Carrère, like Limonov, knows exactly what we want.
" -- Julia Ioffe, The New York Times Book Review "Years ago, I read a ''fictional memoir'', It''s Me, Eddie , by Edward Limonov. The story of this wild Russian, who returned from the west to lead the Bolsheviks, has been updated and explored in all its telling uncertainties in Limonov by the ever inventive Emmanuel Carrère." -- Geoff Dyer, The Guardian "Limonov wrote the page-turning story of his life, and Carrère, with his stylish paraphrasing, knack for narrative and moral asides has finally made this story a best seller. In Italy, they''re turning it into a movie." -- Sophie Pinkham, Bookforum "As Emmanuel Carrère reminds us in Limonov , his ''pseudobiography'' of this stranger-than-fiction character, the young man''s shift to poetry was less radical than it might seem: Russian adolescents embrace verse like American teenagers turn to rap. But it''s in part such romance that drew Carrère to write this prize-winning book, which was published in France in 2011 and translated into English last month." -- Victoria Baena, Boston Globe "If Eduard Limonov, the subject of Emmanuel Carrère''s utterly engrossing biographical ''novel'', hadn''t invented himself, Carrère would have had to invent him . This intrepid adventurer, this self-invented man of action, this writer of stirring, provocative, hilarious and often heartbreaking autobiographical ''novels'', is also a representative figure (dare I say hero?) of our time .
Limonov has lived a life so thoroughly informed by romantic ideals that it verges on a parody of those ideals, and Carrère--weaned, like Savenko, on Dumas''s Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo --explores its allure, its bathos, and its frightening consequences. And this, in turn, allows Carrère to explore something even more consequential: the resonance, though far from perfect harmony, between Limonov''s peculiar ideology and that of the current Russian administration, as well as his intuitive, deeply felt sense of what has motivated Russia''s retreat from the West, of the spirit of resentment and revanchism that determines the nation''s stance in the world. Those interested in understanding the forces at play in Putin''s Russia and on its periphery can learn a lot from Carrère''s insightful reflections on Limonov''s unlikely but (mostly) true story." -- Boris Dralyuk, The Spectator "This is an extraordinary, fantastic book about an extraordinary, fantastic life . I can''t make up my mind [about Limonov]. Carrère can''t either. That''s one of the beauties of this entrancing book. It leaves you in a state of uncertainty.
But read it and you will learn an awful lot about Russia now and in the days of the Soviets." -- Allan Massie, The Scotsman "This book is named after its main character, the 71-year-old Russian writer turned dissident politician Edward Limonov. You might not have heard of him, and after you have read this book you might wish you had not heard of him, but you will certainly have enjoyed reading about his life, thanks to the verve of Emmanuel Carrère''s exhilarating narration. You will probably also understand considerably more about the country that produced such a narcissistic and controversial figure, whom the author finds alluring and repellent in equal measure . Carrère has seized on Limonov''s projection of himself as a literary hero (or anti-hero) straight out of the pages of Dostoevsky, Céline or Henry Miller, and run with it. It is a brilliant ploy . By vividly telling the story of Limonov''s extraordinary life in the present tense, he instantly makes it much more fun to read." -- Rosamund Bartlett, The Telegraph "[Carrère is] one of [France''s] most extraordinary writers .
The book''s most constant refrain reminds us that ''things are always more complicated than they seem,'' which might sound like an apology for the author''s fascination with a fascist, but any life is more complicated than a cursory summation would have it seem. ''His romantic, dangerous life says something,'' writes Carrère. ''Not just about him, Limonov, not just about Russia, but about everything that''s happened since the end of the Second World War.'' That''s quite a statement, but it''s backed up well, especially in Carrère''s pithily condensed chronicle of the fall of the Soviet Union, and in the way he chronicles the evolution of Limonov''s late persona in accordance with the deepest collective desires and discontent of the Russian people. Born in the same month of the siege of Stalingrad, Limonov cannot help but seem emblematic. He''s one of his country''s most adaptable creations--by his own design, a hero of his time. Carrère does not resolve Limonov''s contradictions; instead, he tells his story with lucidity, insight, dutiful context and just the right distance." -- José Teodoro, The National Post "Emmanuel Carrère, one of the best known and most inventive French writers, has found a perfect subject in Edward Limonov, the self-described Johnny Rotten of Soviet dissident writers.
The result is a picaresque gonzo biography, Limonov: The Outrageous Adventures of the Radical Soviet Poet Who Became a Bum in New York, a Sensation in France, and a Political Antihero in Russia . A crackling translation by John Lambert . written in a galloping third person." -- Rachel Donadio, The New York Times "[A] lively, engaging book . fascinating . worth reading . for the ways in which it plays with questions of genre and authorship." -- Shoshana Olidort, The Chicago Tribune "Limonov''s deeds and beliefs help illuminate the history of the Soviet Union since 1989: the chaos, the anger, the despair, the wild-west capitalism, the pillaging of the economy by the oligarchs, the destruction of ordinary people''s savings, the loss of any sense of day-to-day normality, even if that normality had been dull and tarnished and unfree.
" -- Julian Barnes, The Guardian "[ Limonov is] a sweeping account of Edward''s unmistakably epic life, from the cruelty and poverty of his youth in Ukraine, to his conquest of the Western literary scene as an emigre writer in the 1980s, and finally to his return to Russia first as the most minor of rightist revolutionaries, then as a prisoner (locked up in the worst Russian prisons for faux-fomenting real revolution, or really fomenting faux revolution--it''s hard to explain). The last chapter involves his bizarre re-emergence as a mainstream political figure, playing at being a respectable supporter of peaceful change . Edward Limonov is one of the most amazing people on Earth, the author of a few truly great books, a man who has lived a fuller life than any 10 of your most interesting friends combined. That would be more than enough, for someone who was only out to do just that. But for someone who sincerely wanted to rule over hundreds of millions, change the very lines on the map of the world, perhaps die gloriously in battle, and take a seat next to Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky upon his death--not so much. Deep down, what does Edward want? We''ll never know, and Carrere doesn''t pretend to, either. Which makes his book as fascinating as its subject." -- Matt Taibbi, NPR "[An] enchanting book .
[Limonov''s] life story, told chronologically, is so wildly implausible, it would appear absurd--if it weren''t entirely true . With considerable space devoted to the revolutions of 1989, the book will surely find an eager audience with those watching events in the former Soviet Union with unease. But it''s also a rip-roaringly fun read. In his writing, Carrère--described by the Guardia.