Purge I’m a bit more than half way through Sofi Oksanen’s extra­or­di­nary novel, Purge, and wanted to jot down a few impres­sions before doing a com­plete review later. Ms. Oksanen is a young Finnish-​​Estonian writer, born in 1977. Purge is her third novel, and grew out of her orig­i­nal play of the same title (“Puhdistus”). Deceptively sim­ple in style and struc­ture, it’s a won­der­ful exam­ple of the power that art has to make us see the uni­ver­sal in the par­tic­u­lar. In the details of fam­ily life, in the inter­ac­tion between sis­ters, in the strug­gles of one small town, we see the wild swings of his­tory. We see the vio­lent shifts in power align­ments. A fam­ily drama points us to the drama of time and the chaotic march of humanity.

So far, the book has con­cen­trated pri­mar­ily on the 30s, 40s, and early 90s. An Estonia rav­aged by West and East. Minds rav­aged by fate­ful deci­sions made gen­er­a­tions ago. Oksanen writes with an old soul and direct­ness about a way of life that is quickly dis­ap­pear­ing from the planet. Her char­ac­ters make their own soap, grow most of their own food, can every­thing in sight, and do this while the world around them is falling apart.

 

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On our Front Page, we’ve added new poetry by Alan Britt: LOVE POEM THAT LEADS ME       
TO A FLORIDA CANAL

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