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Letters from Novosibirsk
Letters from Novosibirsk
Letters from Novosibirsk
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Letters from Novosibirsk

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In Letters from Novosibirsk an international group of iconoclastic colonists living in New Siberia (of the late 21st century) communicate to the rest of the world via a journal in which they offer advice for saving human civilization. Trouble is, a group of ghosts in their town, previously known as Vydrino, does not welcome them, nor their attitudes. They pop up at unexpected turns, though never too concretely, to try and rattle the newcomers into a more humane existence. Some of the characters are Wynnet (a statistician who has devoted himself to information), Todd (a monarchist), Kolya (a ghost who died too young and wants to be born again to have another chance), and Karyne (an activist who preaches against eating parsnips). In the end no one's life is what it used to be—including the ghosts'.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherMark Saba
Release dateJan 25, 2014
ISBN9781311665744
Letters from Novosibirsk
Author

Mark Saba

Mark Saba grew up in Pittsburgh, but has lived in Connecticut for the last twenty-seven years. He attended the University of Pittsburgh's pharmacy school before deciding pharmacy was not for him and transferring to Wesleyan University (CT), where he began writing. Eventually he made his way to Hollins College for graduate school, where he won several writing awards for his fiction and poetry. His work has appeared in many literary magazines and anthologies around the U.S. and abroad. He is the author of both printed and ebooks of fiction and poetry. Also a painter, his work can be viewed at his web site. He has worked at Yale University as an illustrator and graphic designer for many years.

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    Letters from Novosibirsk - Mark Saba

    Letters from Novosibirsk

    by Mark Saba

    Published by Mark Saba

    Smashwords Edition

    Copyright 2014 Mark Saba

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    Thank you for downloading this free ebook. You are welcome to share it with your friends. This book may be reproduced, copied and distributed for non-commercial purposes, provided the book remains in its complete original form. If you enjoyed this book, please return to Smashwords.com to discover other works by this author. Thank you for your support.

    Table of Contents

    Preface

    First Chapter

    About Mark Saba

    Other Books by Mark Saba

    Excerpt from The Shoemaker

    Connect with Mark Saba

    In the ancient town of Vydrino, in New Siberia, an imaginatively alluring thing had happened: all of its residents were either dead, or had left. After the August Revolution life had become even more unbearable for the local population, and anyone who had survived the course set by the October Revolution found himself even less fortunate immediately following the August one: delivery trains and trucks disappeared, winters seemed to grow more severe, and party functionaries lost their paychecks. Even Vydrino’s old widows, who had survived everything imaginable, threw in the towel and headed with their sons and daughters for bigger places, places where larger numbers could commiserate and collaborate in building a new social order.

    Those who simply would not budge grew restful and thin, nearly ascetic in appearance, though full of the town’s memories, memories that had spanned revolutions and brainwashings, memories with roots deeper than life itself.

    But they too finally expired, and in time the staggered lines of empty dachas, the unpaved alleys, the church’s unfettered interior, and every other place of historical congregation grew thick with the charred remains of Vydrino’s departed souls. There was Nura Kalaushin bending over a well to fetch water, Alexei Semianov lighting an Armenian cigarette while surveying his cucumber patch, Zofiya Kundrat giving birth to her fifth son, and Sergei Brochin leading a band of angry young men to the home of the Kazakh army officer who stole his wife.

    These souls would pop up at random all over town, gray and white and black smudges in the air; sometimes offering a recognizable countenance, even showing up in their period costumes, though never lingering long enough to enter into conversation with any of the town’s newest inhabitants.

    They would not converse, but they did stare. Sometimes the new folks didn’t even know they were being surveyed. Most of them had no interest in ghosts, anyway.

    The new inhabitants of Vydrino (renamed Novosibirsk-38, but known simply as Novosibirsk) were, in fact, completely self-absorbed. They had colonized Novosibirsk as a means of escaping what they considered to be the dull, the unaware, the unenlightened and brain-deadened societies from which they came. Each of the colonists had brought along a perfect sense of purpose and conviction, along with an eagerness to throw off the yoke of a pervasive, questionable, post-industrial euphoria which had resulted from a more perfect materialism.

    From Novosibirsk the colonists, who had come from places as diverse as Texas and Frederikshavn, kept a timely record of their beliefs and accords as a mini-society. They lived and worked largely in self-appointed confinement, without any unecessary distractions, comingling more often in their thoughts as they were laid down in their holy publication: each could draw and benefit therein from the enlightenment of the others. Theirs could not be called a perfect society, they were willing to admit, though they did wish it to be known simply as the most forward-looking one.

    Their monthly journal, Letters from Novosibirsk, was published and distributed world-wide, electronically and otherwise, by others outside Novosibirsk—the more sin-stained adherents of their self-proclaimed order—in hopes that one day the writers would be able to leave Novosibirsk and travel freely to any town on Earth, and there find the self-evident ideals they cherished alive among its inhabitants.

    In the meantime, however, they remained holed-up in Novosibirsk, which had been declared an Economic World Free Zone by the United Nations, a place where anyone could settle and do as they pleased (though most preferred to avoid it completely). There they practiced their near-perfect lives, solitary crusaders writing their historical papers which would surely finally change humankind for the better, while continuing to neglect the existence of the spirits of Vydrino, who were biding their eternity among them.

    1. THE STATISTICIAN

    Good news about Lake Baykal from Wynnet Lee, in this my third report of the year, 2081.

    Another 2.5% of the lake has been proclaimed pollution-free. This means that a new total of 68.7% of the lake’s water holds less than 30 ppm of man-made pollutants when passing through a Ryzhkov aquameter at gravitational force. And, what’s more, another 16 trees (of age 39+) have been saved from termites infesting its south south-western shore.

    But this is hardly encouraging, since more than 58% of the world’s population still owns at least three pieces of furniture made from natural wood. However, the incidence of termites, especially Chinese termites, has been in decline.

    In other matters, General Ford has announced in Tahiti that its new coconut-driven GV (the Palmetto) will be ready for marketing next spring, provided enough American writers are on hand to assist in the local harvest. The milk disperses without a trace of exhaust excluding of course the Piña Colada aroma that has already lifted the spirits of engineers working on the project.

    About one-third of the population of Tahiti has left in recent years because of the 80% drop in their tourist industry. People would much rather lounge on the shores of the Neva or Thames now that the palm has been successfully transplanted to northern Europe as a result of the continuing warming trend.

    Tahitians have been known to be aggressive in tight cities, and it is my recommendation to the World Population Density Council that no more than six be allowed to congregate in any city of more than four million. Their dwellings should be placed between seven and ten kilometers apart, and the number of Pacific palms in their backyards should be limited to two (one female, one male) because they have been known to violate international noise laws during certain swinging rituals involving the trees.

    In a related matter, the town of Chester, Connecticut, now home to more than 750,000 Palestinians, has declared itself a shutter-free zone. They say that the region’s historical black-and-white colonial homes are an insult to their religious heritage, an obvious reference to the black-and-white pattern of their head wraps. The Cambodian population of Dream Lake, Minnesota is watching the case closely, since the new Dream Lake shopping complex, already flying in shoppers from half the hemisphere, bears an 80% resemblance to Angkor Vat. (In unrelated but 75% significant developments, Kenya has been chosen as the site for the coordination of next year’s Root Conference and Survey, and 31% of all Gypsies living along the Danube now speak nothing but American. Seven out of eight mountains are nice to look at, most of them are in Tibet, and reading has been proven by the World Confederation of Medical Practitioners to be unrelated to intelligence.)

    Nura never quite belonged in Vydrino, even if she had been born and raised there. She’d spent the best years of young adulthood in Moscow, and the effects of it had never left her, though she’d already been dead seventy-nine Earth years. But Vydrino filled her substance more than Moscow did, for it was Vydrino’s light that she had seen before any other, and Vydrino’s light that had been her last.

    For Nura, time passed as swiftly as a twirling leaf, and she enjoyed her new house guests more with each passing year. Years themselves of course meant nothing to Nura now, unless they were observed in conjunction with her latest inhabitants, presently one rather thin, woolly-headed, needle-nosed American named Wynnet.

    Nura’s favorite pastime was blowing some of Wynnet’s scribbled ledger sheets into the waste basket, or jamming the news from Irkhutsk, or better still, clouding the bathroom mirror just as Wynnet tried for an even part in his hair.

    They did have a brief encounter once, though Wynnet would never have admitted to it. It happened on a Sunday afternoon, when Wynnet, against his better judgment, sat down in his twice-reupholstered brown chair and almost fell asleep. This was something he did not normally do. But the day had been warm and damp, and the morning’s review of statistics had taken too heavy a toll on his eyes. He looked into the fireplace and saw last year’s coals, dark and dusty, too tired to wonder how they had come back to his summer hearth.

    The coals became darker still; the andirons and stone receded like an eclipsed sun, and their heavy silhouette locked into Wynnet’s occluded pupils like a great black key, unlocking a series of shadowy visions he never knew he had: black birds hovering about the room, ex-girlfriends perfuming the stale, late-summer air, his mother telling him bedtime stories, tree branches and dark hills from his past teasing his selective memory. And there before the forgotten fire, taking her turn, was Nura.

    At first he thought it must be someone he’d met at a grocery store in Grand Rapids. Such visions of faces he had happened to find interesting sometimes did recur, but his attitude toward them was one of total distrust and condescension. A vision of some inconsequential acquaintance from his past could not be allowed to mean anything.

    Well, Nura was not from his past, though she was from his home’s past, a fact that even Wynnet had little trouble discerning, judging from the clothes she wore. And by now he could not bring himself to disregard her; the great black key that had opened his eyes was not as readily available to close them.

    He had not altered his position in the tattered, comfortable chair one inch. His legs extended firmly, set apart, before his slumped torso; one open hand supported his head as an elbow dug into one soft brown arm of the chair. He tried to speak, but a gust of wind put the words back into his mouth, though nothing else in the room had been touched by it. It was a cold wind, not simply fresh, but directly from the opposite season’s iciest midnight. But this too he wrote off as an extraordinary chimney draft, perfectly natural, and unremarkable.

    And then, he thought: Who am I talking to? There was no longer anything in the air, though he wasn’t quite sure now that there had ever been anything. What could he do but get up and go to the kitchen for his favorite Sunday afternoon treat: a glass of hazelmond-chocolate milk.

    2. THE NUN OF NOVOSIBIRSK

    Elsa’s arrival at Novosibirsk had turned more than one head: who among the town’s more seasoned inhabitants could have missed her soft, arching eyebrows, settled blond hair, or even the careful way she carried herself? Her arrival had spoken of things beyond Novosibirsk, of ways that been discarded by its hermits. There was even something of the child in her, so natural and unassuming she seemed. To everyone’s surprise, though, she quickly adopted the guarded life of their town. She had been there five years without thinking once about returning to her native Denmark; her days there had become as benign as anyone else’s.

    That morning she was sitting before her triptych mirror applying eye shadow. She did not wear make-up every day, but when she did, she wore it meticulously.

    She was known for doing things meticulously.

    There was the time she gave

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