“My blissful childhood was shattered without warning when I was about ten years old. One day, my father told me that he had spent seventeen years of his life in prisons, Gulag labor camps, and internal exile. At that moment, his confession became the greatest shock I had ever experienced. “My father — the kindest and wisest man on earth — and suddenly this?” I refused to believe my own ears. But my dad did not stop at the bare fact. He spoke of hunger, of cruelty, of utter powerlessness — and of his own horrific existence within a totalitarian, inhuman system. — Volodymyr Shablia, Stone. Book One. Author's Preface Context note: This passage comes from the author’s preface and reflects a real childhood revelation that became the moral and emotional foundation of the novel. Learning that his father had survived years of prisons, labor camps, and exile under the Soviet totalitarian system, the author transformed personal memory into a literary quest to understand repression, trauma, and human endurance.”
Quote by Володимир Шабля
Work
Камень. Биографический роман: Часть первая. Первые шаги к свету и обратно
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: The Ordinary Grit: Courage Under an Unforgiving Sky
Source: Lover at Last
“Who we are takes generations to create and doesn’t end with death.”
Source: The Ogallala Road: A Memoir of Love and Reckoning
Source: HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY
Source: The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million
“You mustn’t throw them away. Let me have them.”
Source: Kindertransport: A Drama
Source: Scotch-Irish: A Social History