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Hardcover Moonlight in Odessa Book

ISBN: 1596916729

ISBN13: 9781596916722

Moonlight in Odessa

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In Odessa, Ukraine, Daria, a whip-smart engineer, spends her days underemployed as a secretary--a job she was lucky to get in this rotten economy. She spends her evenings moonlighting as an... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Engaging, Surprising, and Wonderful

I ordered this book because of ongoing research I'm conducting into Russia, not because of an outright interest in the mail order brides, Odessa, or the daily life of a charming young woman with a bewildering, and deeply funny, series of problems to overcome. I don't think that I'm this book's target audience (Male, 41, Father, Suburbanite, etc.) And yet, from the first few pages I found myself drawn to Daria's problems. The writer engaged me, making me care about the characters deeply, and when Daria found success, I felt happy for her, When she was betrayed, I felt for her. I know Daria isn't "real", but there are certainly many people like her. If one of the reasons that you read novels is to step for a time into another person's life, and to gain an understanding of an alternative perspective, then "Moonlight in Odessa" is the book for you.

Loved it!

I really enjoyed this novel! It was such a page-turner and I found myself not able to put it down! Daria is such a well developed character. I actually cared what happened to her, I understood her and I found myself feeling sorry for her. At some points I wanted to shout at the book and tell her what choice to make! I was generally invested in the main character and in her relationships with other characters who were equally as well developed. That, to me, is the mark of a good novel. The book itself is beautifully written, and is so descriptive of life in Odessa, but not to the point of being melodramatic or boring. I really enjoyed this novel and finished it in two days, unable to put it down. I'd recommend it to anyone!

From Ukraine with love

Reconciling the mythic true love with the often harsh reality of real life can be kind of a pain-at the very least. I mean, how is a girl supposed to keep her romantic imagination alive in this day and age? And should it be something we even want to keep alive? In an ideal situation your parents would tell you to hold out for true love, for that wow factor, for the best friend you want to sleep with. But in reality-lets face it we (and by that I mean men and women) tend to settle for a lot less than that. Daria lives with her grandmother in one the most attractive cities in the world. It's on the gorgeous black sea, has the third most beautiful opera house in the world, tons of monuments and a beautiful, educated, well dressed population. But like any city it has its problems. Because Daria lives in Odessa Ukraine, the post soviet economy means almost everyone has to work two jobs just to be able to maintain a standard of living. The mob runs just about everything and even with that the electricity, phone lines and ports tend to be dysfunctional. But Daria is making it work. With an engineering degree but no jobs in the field she ends up working a secretary for a Hebrew firm-and on day one her boss, David Harmon, makes it clear that sleeping with him is "the best part of the job." Considering the salary she makes is about ten times what any Odessa firm would pay Daria keeps the job-and learns some inventive ways of putting off Mr. Harmon. But it all starts falling apart when the stand in mistress Daria obtained for Harmon wants her job... For extra security Daria goes to moonlight at a matchmaking firm-Soviet Unions. The Western men she meets don't exactly sell her on the process, but her friendship with American missionaries and visitors to Odessa has left her with a lust for all things American. So when a perfectly nice man starts e-courting Daria she has a choice to make-stay in the city she loves (and maybe with a mobster she has mixed feelings about) or leave her grandmother, friends and country behind for the land of the free-and a man she hardly knows. This is a really fantastic book-sort of Sophie Kinsella and Marian Keyes meets "Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus." It's not only an incredibly entertaining tale (Daria's first person narration will have you falling in love with her after a page or two) it's a very real, often harsh look at the expectations of women around the world, and the extremes that a person will go to to find love. Every now and then I read a book that wasn't just good, wasn't just great, but really made me feel lucky to have read (and envious of those who have yet to read it) and "Moonlight in Odessa" is just such a book. It's an excellent story that flows between black humor and blacker reality, love, lust family, friends and what we so often take for granted-the wonderful freedom of choice. And the information about the culture, economy and just the way things are done in Odessa was absolutely fascin

A Work of Brilliance

I wanted to read MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA because it was compared with A SHORT HISTORY OF TRACTORS IN UKRAINIAN and I had found the latter book interesting. Yet MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA is more than merely interesting: It is fascinating and complex. TRACTORS IN UKRAINIAN is about a Soviet mail order bride who comes to the United State to marry. She is cruel, calculating and greedy. The heroine of MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA is just the opposite, and this novel examines the reverse of that same dynamic. Reading MOONLIGHT, it is obvious that these women who come from foreign lands to marry U.S. citizens they barely know need protections not dissimilar to those offered to children who are about to be adopted, including inspections of their future husbands and homes by social workers. MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA is a complex and touching story. Reading it, it is hard to believe that author Janet Skeslien Charles was born and raised in Montana, so thoroughly does she seem to be inhabited by a Ukrainian soul, understanding the fears, the hopes and the needs of the citizens of that country. She is especially strong is describing Odessa and the pride that its natives take in their city. When she finally brings her heroine to the States, Charles is uncanny of her descriptions of this country as seen through the eyes of a foreigner. In some ways -- wonderful ways -- MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA is a classic fairytale, complete with the ultimate bad boy who might not be all that bad and a frog who very well may turn into a prince. In the best possible way, MOONLIGHT IN ODESSA ends in possibility.

Great book!

I really enjoyed this book and was compelled to read it in one afternoon. I thought the main character was very likable and I was genuinely interested in what happened to her as the book went on. I loved reading about life in Odessa. I did find the plot a little unbelievable; it was at times hard for me to imagine such an intelligent woman winding up in such a situation- but maybe that just illustrates how determined women are to achieve better lives for themselves. While the ending was very hopeful for Daria, I liked that everything was not wrapped up with a bow. To me, there were elements of "Pride in Prejudice" with the whole things are not what they seem premise.
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