Old Memyl Laughs Last was published by the Foreign Languages Publishing House in Moscow. It contains 4 short stories which were included, in some cases with a different title, in his book Stories from Chukotka. Translated by D. Rottenberg. No copyright date listed.
Categories
Common Tags
#mmiw
A Dream in Polar Fog
alaska
Amber Webb
Apay'uq
arctic
Beringia
boreal books
climate change
covid-19
epidemic
frozen north
gender-based violence
geology
Indigenous
influenza
intergenerational trauma
interview transcript
inuit
Inupiaq
Inupiat
Julia Phillips
Kamchatka
literature
Mary Odden
media
MMIWG
Mostly Water
Northwest Alaska
Nunavut
pandemic
podcast
post-Soviet
Red Hen Press
reindeer
rural alaska
rural mental health
Russia
salmonberries
secrets
stories
tundra
whaling
When the Whales Leave
Yu'pik
Most Popular Posts
- African Americans in Alaska: Black Lives Matter (16,951)
- Isolation and Depression: The Darker Side of Rural Alaska (2,915)
- While Nanabijou Sleeps: Tanya Talaga on racism and… (2,697)
- Split Tooth Review: Expressions of the Circumpolar Arctic (2,602)
- Review of Taaqtumi: An Anthology of Arctic Horror Stories (2,481)
- Crossing Borders: Review of Floating Coast by… (2,015)
- Yuri Rytkheu: Review of When the Whales Leave and… (1,960)
- Climate Change and Climate Justice: Review of Fierce… (1,648)
- “We are resilient people”: Artist Amber… (1,571)
- Under Nushagak Bluff and the shadow of pandemic in… (1,205)
Recent Posts
- Yuri Rytkheu: Review of When the Whales Leave and other Chukchi stories of the far North
- “We are resilient people”: Artist Amber Webb on surviving pandemics in rural Alaska
- Under Nushagak Bluff and the shadow of pandemic in Alaska literature: Review of Mia C. Heavener’s debut novel
- African Americans in Alaska: Black Lives Matter
- Stories that Connect: Review of Mostly Water by Mary Odden
- Crossing Borders: Review of Floating Coast by Bathsheba Demuth
- An Interview with Julia Phillips, Part 3
- Review of Taaqtumi: An Anthology of Arctic Horror Stories
- An Interview with Julia Phillips, Part 2
- While Nanabijou Sleeps: Tanya Talaga on racism and survival of Indigenous youth