Perestroika in Paris

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English

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"From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Thousand Acres and the New York Times best-selling Last Hundred Years Trilogy, a captivating, brilliantly imaginative story of three extraordinary animals--and a young boy--whose lives intersect in Paris Parasis a spirited racehorse at a racetrack west of Paris. At dusk, one afternoon she pushes open the door of her stall--she's a curious filly--and, after traveling through the night, arrives by chance in the City of Light. She's dazzled, and often mystified,by the sights, sounds and smells around her, but she isn't afraid. Soon she meets an elegant dog, a German shorthair pointer named Frida, who knows how to get by without attracting the attention of suspicious Parisians. Paras and Frida coexist for a timein the city's lush green spaces, nourished by Frida's strategic trips to the bakery and the butchershop. They keep company with two irrepressible ducks, and an opinionated raven. But then Paras meets a human boy, Etienne, and discovers a new, otherworldly part of Paris: the secluded, ivy-walled house where the boy and his nearly-one-hundred-year-old great grandmother live, quietly and unto themselves. As the cold weather and Christmas near, the unlikeliest of friendships bloom among humans and animals alike. But how long can a runaway horse live undiscovered in Paris? And how long can a boy keep her hidden, and all his own? Jane Smiley's beguiling new novel is itself an adventure that celebrates curiosity and ingenuity, and expresses the desire of all creatures for true friendship, love, and freedom"--

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Contributors
Smiley, Jane Author
Toren, Suzanne Narrator
ISBN
9780525520351
052552035
9781432887209
9781501956812

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Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Jane Smiley and Cheryl Strayed are equally effective at portraying life in the American Midwest, and both authors are able to capture the emotionally charged challenges of family life. -- Shauna Griffin
Russell Banks writes contemporary literary fiction that deals with real-life problems: career, relationships, and identity. Like Jane Smiley, he portrays working-class characters with an accessible style and dark humor to bring out the occasional bleakness of ordinary life. His one historical novel uses the same style and approaches. -- Krista Biggs
Thoughtful treatments of family issues are at the heart of Kim Edwards's and Jane Smiley's fiction. Their character-driven narratives describe the wide range of emotions experienced in everyday domestic life. Though they deal with tough subjects, both authors use humor and hope to keep the tone from becoming too melancholy. -- Keeley Murray
Though most often associated with their portraits of life in the contemporary American Midwest, both of these adventurous novelists have also written intriguing literary historical fiction with medieval settings. Their fiction is often satirical, with Jane Smiley's humor being typically softer than the biting edge for which Evan S. Connell is known. -- Michael Shumate
Although Jane Smiley's novels are angst-filled and evocative, while Claire Lombardo's are funny and feel-good, both authors write literary fiction starring complex, authentic characters in tangled family relationships. Humor and wit are hallmarks of both authors as well. -- Mary Olson
Groff and Smiley both write character-driven Literary fiction that delves into the psyches of their protagonists. Richly-detailed settings lend an atmospheric tone to their work, which often centers around domestic life, family histories, and complex relationships between relatives. Touches of romance, mystery, and humor make each of their tales unique. -- Keeley Murray
Readers who like the family drama aspect of Anna Quindlen's work may enjoy branching out to other environs with Jane Smiley. A Midwesterner, Smiley has quite a different voice from Quindlen's but shares with her an impressive range of styles and a talent for capturing emotion. -- Shauna Griffin

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Smiley, a longtime best-selling Pulitzer winner, follows a series of children's novels about kids and horses with this spellbinding, subtly shrewd fable. Perestroika is the name of a very curious, young French racehorse, called Paras for short, who one fine day pushes open the unlatched door of her stall, picks up her trainer's purse, and makes her way to Paris. She quickly attracts a guardian, Frida, a beautiful, streetwise hunting dog whose busker owner has died, and who has been fending for herself by taking full advantage of Parisians' adoration for well-mannered canines. Soon Paras and Frida befriend two mallards with the hilarious punk rock names of Sid and Nancy, and a haughty--or so he seems--raven, Sir Raoul Corvus Corax. They communicate easily, and each possesses a distinct and revealing perspective on the world and the art of survival. As careful as elegant Paras is, she can't help but be conspicuous, and soon attracts the awe of a very special little boy, Étienne, who lives with and takes care of his blind, hard of hearing, yet still quite keen great-grandmother in a deteriorating mansion, which is also home to a restless young black rat named Kurt. How boy, horse, dog, ducks, raven, and rat join forces and bring wonder and joy to lonely humans makes for a tenderly clever, charming, and spirit-nourishing tale of freedom and responsibility, acceptance and friendship, generosity and love.HIGH-DEMAND BACK STORY: Readers will flock to the first adult novel from Smiley in five years, especially since this smart and enchanting tale is a guaranteed antidote to stress.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Fans of Pulitzer winner Smiley (A Thousand Acres) won't be surprised to find a horse in her fanciful latest; this time out it's a talking racehorse named Perestroika. Paras, as the horse is known, wanders out of her stable and finds herself in Paris's Place du Trocadéro, where she meets Frida, a shorthaired German pointer who understands money and uses it to buy food for Paras and herself. There are no yellow vest protestors in Smiley's idyllic Paris, where shopkeepers know all their customers and happily make change for well-behaved Frida. Paras was happy at the track, but she's too curious to stay there (as Smiley indicates perhaps too often), and in her fable-like travels around Paris she encounters a wise raven who dispenses advice, an eight-year-old orphan who can hide a horse, and plenty of happy endings--not just for the animals, but for the people they encounter, especially if they, like Paras, are open to seeing the wonders of the world. As relationships deepen between animals and humans in their exploration of where to call home, Smiley steers them toward a satisfying feel-good ending. Relentlessly upbeat--there are no villains here, and even dogs and rats cooperate--this is the perfect book for those for whom the real world, wracked with pandemic and politics, has become something to avoid. (Dec.)

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Library Journal Review

As twilight descends on the Paris racetrack, a spirited filly named Perestroika (Paras for short) pushes against her unlatched stall door and walks into the City of Light. In her ambles, she befriends a dignified, beautiful dog named Frida, once companion to a street performer and now on her own. As they camp out on the Champs de Mars--a comfortably accommodating place, though thoroughly Thoroughbred Paras finds the carousel horses puzzlingly stolid--they meet querulous ducks Sid and Nancy and full-of-himself raven Raoul, even as Paras's owners desperately hunt for their beloved horse. Paras is fed oats and apples by a bakeshop assistant (Frida has her own singular way of getting and paying for food) and meets a lad named Étienne, who lives a solitary life with his great-grandmama in a decaying mansion. Étienne manages to lead Paras home, leaving the birds in a tizzy and Frida circling the city to figure out how to reclaim her friend. VERDICT All's well that ends well in this delightful yet never treacly celebration of interspecies cooperation from Pulitzer Prize winner Smiley. A bright and hopeful story that gently shares our need to belong.

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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Smiley, a longtime best-selling Pulitzer winner, follows a series of children's novels about kids and horses with this spellbinding, subtly shrewd fable. Perestroika is the name of a very curious, young French racehorse, called Paras for short, who one fine day pushes open the unlatched door of her stall, picks up her trainer's purse, and makes her way to Paris. She quickly attracts a guardian, Frida, a beautiful, streetwise hunting dog whose busker owner has died, and who has been fending for herself by taking full advantage of Parisians' adoration for well-mannered canines. Soon Paras and Frida befriend two mallards with the hilarious punk rock names of Sid and Nancy, and a haughty—or so he seems—raven, Sir Raoul Corvus Corax. They communicate easily, and each possesses a distinct and revealing perspective on the world and the art of survival. As careful as elegant Paras is, she can't help but be conspicuous, and soon attracts the awe of a very special little boy, Étienne, who lives with and takes care of his blind, hard of hearing, yet still quite keen great-grandmother in a deteriorating mansion, which is also home to a restless young black rat named Kurt. How boy, horse, dog, ducks, raven, and rat join forces and bring wonder and joy to lonely humans makes for a tenderly clever, charming, and spirit-nourishing tale of freedom and responsibility, acceptance and friendship, generosity and love.HIGH-DEMAND BACK STORY: Readers will flock to the first adult novel from Smiley in five years, especially since this smart and enchanting tale is a guaranteed antidote to stress. Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2020 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

A nurse at Evelina London Children's Hospital, Glass follows up Dylan Thomas Prize long-listee Peach with Rest and Be Thankful, a timely if sometimes eerie tale of a pediatric nurse suffering burnout as her life shifts uncertainly and a mysterious figure dances at the edge of her vision (30,000-copy first printing). Surfacing every six or seven years with titles that earn superlatives, the Alex Award-winning Maltman (Night Birds) here offers The Land, a literary-noir crossover featuring dropout/programmer/caretaker Lucien Swenson, recovering from a car accident in the last months of the 20th century. His search for a former lover leads him to a white supremacist church and strange encounters with wolves, angry ravens, and a shadowy woman. In Tell Me How To Be, Patel's follow-up to the NPR best-booked If You See Me, Don't Say Hi, Los Angeles-based songwriter Akash leaves Los Angeles (and the boyfriend he keeps secret from his family) and returns home to Illinois when his widowed mother sells the family home. He plans to pack his things, mourn his father, and mend family ties, but he didn't anticipate meeting his first romantic interest and falling in love again. (35,000-copy first printing). The heroine of Pulitzer Prize winner Smiley's Perestroika in Paris is a high-spirited filly who wanders from her stall at the racetrack and makes her way to the heart of glorious Paris, befriending a venturesome German Shepherd, a gaggle of ornery birds, and a boy named Etienne who lives in the ivy-clad seclusion of his great-grandmother's home. But how long can a horse named Paras (short for Perestroika) remain at liberty in the big city? By Spanish author Vilas, the No. 1 internationally best-selling autobiographical novel Ordesa features a schoolteacher who has returned to his hometown in the Pyrenees to reassess his life. Retired, divorced, and mourning his deceased parents, he looks honestly at loss and the meaning of life now defined mostly by memory.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.
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Library Journal Reviews

As twilight descends on the Paris racetrack, a spirited filly named Perestroika (Paras for short) pushes against her unlatched stall door and walks into the City of Light. In her ambles, she befriends a dignified, beautiful dog named Frida, once companion to a street performer and now on her own. As they camp out on the Champs de Mars—a comfortably accommodating place, though thoroughly Thoroughbred Paras finds the carousel horses puzzlingly stolid—they meet querulous ducks Sid and Nancy and full-of-himself raven Raoul, even as Paras's owners desperately hunt for their beloved horse. Paras is fed oats and apples by a bakeshop assistant (Frida has her own singular way of getting and paying for food) and meets a lad named Étienne, who lives a solitary life with his great-grandmama in a decaying mansion. Étienne manages to lead Paras home, leaving the birds in a tizzy and Frida circling the city to figure out how to reclaim her friend. VERDICT All's well that ends well in this delightful yet never treacly celebration of interspecies cooperation from Pulitzer Prize winner Smiley. A bright and hopeful story that gently shares our need to belong.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.

Copyright 2020 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Fans of Pulitzer winner Smiley (A Thousand Acres) won't be surprised to find a horse in her fanciful latest; this time out it's a talking racehorse named Perestroika. Paras, as the horse is known, wanders out of her stable and finds herself in Paris's Place du Trocadéro, where she meets Frida, a shorthaired German pointer who understands money and uses it to buy food for Paras and herself. There are no yellow vest protestors in Smiley's idyllic Paris, where shopkeepers know all their customers and happily make change for well-behaved Frida. Paras was happy at the track, but she's too curious to stay there (as Smiley indicates perhaps too often), and in her fable-like travels around Paris she encounters a wise raven who dispenses advice, an eight-year-old orphan who can hide a horse, and plenty of happy endings—not just for the animals, but for the people they encounter, especially if they, like Paras, are open to seeing the wonders of the world. As relationships deepen between animals and humans in their exploration of where to call home, Smiley steers them toward a satisfying feel-good ending. Relentlessly upbeat—there are no villains here, and even dogs and rats cooperate—this is the perfect book for those for whom the real world, wracked with pandemic and politics, has become something to avoid. (Dec.)

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly.
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