Ratings1
Average rating5
*For the space of a breath or two, that wolf had entranced her, mesmerised her, made her believe—the impossible. And that was all it took.*
*Nothing about this wolf was as it should be.*
Pyotra Nikolayevna Kulakova lives in a small Russian settlement in the northern Siberian taiga, where the polar night lasts for a good month out of the year and the temperature rarely reaches above freezing point. Pyotra’s days, too, seem congealed and unchanging, laden with grief, until her baby brother’s close encounter with a tundra wolf upends the lives of the three members of the Kulakov family in one fell swoop.
Pyotra and the Wolf is a queer retelling of Sergei Prokofiev’s symphonic fairy tale, structurally influenced by matryoshka dolls and memory castles. This is a story of darkness and light, love and loss, beast and human. Whichever way the spinning kopek falls.
Reviews with the most likes.
I love this story of determination and strength by Elna Holst. Pyotra and the Wolf starts off with one viewpoint and we get to see Pyotra's growth and her view of the world change.
I received a free copy of this book and I am writing a review without prejudice and voluntarily.
Check out the rest of my review at Phoebe's Randoms. Link in bio.