Synopses & Reviews
"Precisely chiseled blocks of soulful, funny, heart-rending fiction."Ted Jonathan, author of Bones and Jokes
"Rubin will take you on a gritty but glamorous tour through New Delhi, Italy, Wall Street, the French Riviera, Grand Canyon, and Brooklyn. . . . And still, you will be the one who's running to catch up with her wit, wisdom, and wondrously poetic narratives."Michael Montlack, author of Cool Limbo
Whether she's writing an engaging account of childhood memories from the Ukraine ("Otlichnitsa"), her family's quixotic immigration experiences ("Welcome to America"), or current romantic misadventures ("Curious Things at the W Hotel"), with a unique voice and sharp eye for detail, award-winning author Marina Rubin reveals the triumphant absurdities of contemporary times. Her stories and characters are all too human, too familiar, too flawed, and just charming enough to be endearing and unforgettable in these poetic, bite-sized short stories.
Marina Rubin's writing has appeared in more than seventy literary journals and magazines. Her family emigrated from the former Soviet Union seeking political asylum in 1989. She is an associate editor of Tribeca's literary and art magazine Mudfish, and a 2013 recipient of COJECO's Blueprint Fellowship. She resides in Brooklyn, New York.
Review
...One of the richer contemporary visions of America that Ive read."
NANO FictionMarina Rubins collection of micro-stories hits all the right notes with its humor and warmth
" Coachella Valley Independent
Rubin is a new voice on the scene and her collection of flash fiction was a revelation
” The Reporter
Like Russian-born novelist Shteyngart, Marina Rubin mines her immigrant experience for her fiction, uncovering the universal. Sparse, precise, lush...” Jewish Week
Tradition intersects with cultural displacement... this is not your typical story of Russian refuseniks and thats exactly why we love it
” Jewniverse
"Her stories burst out of their boxes, as she writes with exuberance about her familys experience and becoming an American..." Jewish Woman magazine
Synopsis
In a unique collection of poetic bite-sized stories, Marina Rubin embraces immigration, love, and city life with humor and passion
About the Author
Marina Rubins writing has appeared in more than 70 literary journals and magazines. Her family emigrated from the former Soviet Union seeking political asylum in 1989. She is an associate editor of Tribecas literary and art magazine, Mudfish, and a 2013 recipient of COJECOs Blueprint Fellowship.