The time of the goats /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Starova, Luan.
Uniform title:Koha e dhive. English
Imprint:Madison, Wisconsin : University of Wisconsin Press, [2012]
Description:1 online resource (vii, 154 pages)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11170386
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Kramer, Christina Elizabeth (Professor)
ISBN:029929093X
9780299290931
0299290948
9780299290948
Notes:Also known as a translation from Macedonian under: Vremeto na kozite.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:It's the late 1940s in Skopje, Yugoslavia, in the critical year leading to Tito's break with Stalin. Pushed to leave mountain villages to become the new proletariat in urban factories, a flood of peasants crowds into Skopje - and with them, all of their goats. Suffering from hunger, Skopje's citizens welcome the newcomers. But municipal leaders are faced with a dilemma when the central government issues an order calling for the slaughter of the country's goat population. With food so scarce, will they hide the outlawed animals? Or will they comply with the edict and endure the bite of hunger?
Other form:Print version: Starova, Luan. Time of the goats. Madison : University of Wisconsin Press, ©2014 9780299290948
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in 1940s Yugoslavia, this dark, peculiarly comic novel-the second in an acclaimed multivolume Balkan saga-picks up where Starova's My Father's Books leaves off. As the novel begins, Tito has relocated the peasants to the city of Skopje so that they may become the new urban proletariat. But the invasive multitude of goats that the peasants have brought with them to the city creates a dilemma. While the hungry people of Skopje come to rely on the goats' milk and cheese, the central government decrees the goats to be the enemies of Socialism and calls for their slaughter. As the narrator's intellectual father works closely with Changa, the leader of the goatherds, to find a solution, the novel's tone moves steadily towards allegory and folklore; and as with most folk tales, the ending seems preordained, intended to teach its reader a lesson. There is never any doubt about what fate the Balkan goats will suffer, and thus, no real surprises to be had in this novel. But that element seems of secondary importance to Starova, whose interest seems to lie in depicting the small drama of life under Tito and the harm caused by the decrees of a conflicted and remote Communist party. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Publisher's Weekly Review