
The Stories of the Great Steppe: The Anthology of Modern Kazakh Literature
Alva Robinson
Rabis Abazov, ed. Sergey Levchin and Ilya Bernshtein, tr.
2013, Cognella Academic Publishing, 978-1-62131-8-378, $68.95 pb.
In early 1953, following the death of Joseph Stalin and the ascension of Nikita Khrushchev to first secretary, the Soviet Union began to ease repression and censorship of creative arts. In the Kazakh Soviet Republic (today’s Kazakhstan), this gave rise to a generation of literary figures who would be the engines to drive the nation forward. Mass-produced publishing and popular readership rose for the first time alongside nomadic storytelling traditions. This anthology of short stories and poetry by some of Kazakhstan’s most prominent writers and poets, rooted in the nomadic traditions, helps readers understand the “universe through the eyes of a nomad” while revealing some of the social impacts of the period’s major trends and events, such as Soviet patriotism and World War II.
You may also be interested in...

Discoveries From Phoenician Seafaring City-States Reveal Trade, Not Conquest Bound Mediterranean World
Author Vadim S. Jigoulov’s The Phoenicians reveals that Phoenicia’s seafaring city-states bound the Mediterranean world via trade rather than conquest.
The Vanishing Sea by Artist Dinara Mirtalipova—Our Book Review
How often do we take nature for granted, assuming it will never vanish? In US-based folk illustrator Dinara Mirtalipova’s new children’s book, a sea is the main character: the one that provides livelihood and prosperity, until humans’ poor choices cause its demise.