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Mebet

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Mebet concerns a man of the taiga, a hunter, in a moving narrative that blends ethnographic detail, indigenous mythology, and the snowy landscapes of the Arctic. The protagonist is a Nenets, a member of one of the peoples who call far northern Russia home. Dubbed “The Gods’ Favorite” for his seeming imperviousness to harm or grief, Mebet earns the envy and derision of his fellow tribesmen. He lives that carefree and blessed life until his old age, when one day a supernatural messenger arrives to lead him to where the realms of the living and the dead meet. Now the God’s Favorite must confront the price to be paid for his elevated position, and a series of dread trials that lie in store.

Called a dark and terrifying fantasy and the Nenets Lord of the Rings by Russian writer and journalist Sergey Kuznetsov, Grigorenko’s Mebet is a powerful story about humanity, personal fate, and responsibility. Leading Russian literary critic Galina Yuzefovich welcomed Mebet as a true epic for the Nenets, a book that is profound, thrilling and vibrant. Whether the book will earn that lofty place within Nenets culture remains to be seen, but the very publication of the book marks a watershed event.

Published with the support of the Institute for Literary Translation, Russia. 

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Preface
Preface The taiga has no history. It does have a memory, however, which persists in half-fantastical legends and tales. Even the stories which claim to be accounts from those who personally participated in great events or witnessed them firsthand – such as the migration of the ancestors of the Yakuts from Lake Baikal to the Lena River – rather resemble folktales. The white man has sought for centuries now to painstakingly sift these fantastical stories for useful material, to melt them down into hard historical facts, perhaps not of a great quantity but at least an acceptable one. Thanks to the white man for this. Nevertheless, deep inside he understands that there is a good share of absurdity to his efforts. Europeans’ reason goes astray, dies among the legends handed down in the taiga. It cannot survive in this boundless space, made sacred by blood, which does not obey numbers and figures. The peoples of this ocean of green live in such a way that yesterday and events of a century ago can stand side by side. The Red Army marches into the Mansi villages immediately in the wake of the Vikings. An old Evenki man waits for an appointed meeting not with the aid of a clock or calendar, but by the crackling of a wedge driven into an old pine log. The inhabitants of this world include spirits and deities just as much as forest animals and people. The poor Nanai man Dersu, who killed a tiger in his youth, saw no difference between a man and an animal, and therefore his conscience tormented him for the rest of his life. Scholars have scrupulously recorded a great many of the countless remarkable things here, and explained their import and their sources, but they remain exotica, something that one can marvel at, even sympathize with, but nevertheless something that one cannot really grasp. Yet in human history the taiga has played its role, an invisible one that has not been subject to description. For millennia this ocean of green has absorbed bits of the clashes that have raged in the civilized worlds of Europe and Asia, and yet it has given nothing in exchange, it has cast nothing ashore – it has turned everything into a mystery, an enigma, an undecipherable text. It may be that this is why the taiga remains the only expanse on the earth where human strivings have yet to be explained, and here a person can look forward to the most remarkable and crucial encounter of all: coming face to face with himself. Alexander Grigorenko

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