Yelena Moskovich was born in Ukraine (former USSR) and emigrated to Wisconsin with her family as Jewish refugees in 1991. She studied theatre at Emerson College, Boston, and in France at the Lecoq School of Physical Theatre and Université Paris 8. Her plays and performances have been produced in the US, Canada, France, and Sweden. She has also written for Vogue, Frieze Magazine, The Paris Review, Times Literary Supplement, New Statesman, Happy Reader, Mixte Magazine, the Skirt Chronicles, and Dyke_on Magazine. She is the winner of the 2017 Galley Beggar Press Short Story Prize. In 2018, she served as a curator and exhibiting artist at the Los Angeles Queer Biennial. Her first novel The Natashas was published in 2016. She lives in Paris.
* Longlisted for the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize"If
Ferrante's Neapolitan series was condensed into one book and that
one book was turned into a person who spent a good deal of time at
queer punk shows on X, but then they got clean and a job where they
wore pumps and a pencil skirt and longed for all the selves they
had to abandon to survive -- and then that person became a book --
this would be that book."
--Gala Mukomolova, NYLON"Virtuoso is a novel / is a performance /
is a dance with movements and variations / is poetry / is film / is
a palette splattered with colors / is a body out of breath.
Virtuoso is truly a sensual euphoria, one that must be experienced
firsthand."
--Cameron Finch, Michigan Quarterly Review"Virtuoso didn't simply
engage me on an intellectual level, but also on a deep and
emotional one. It's the kind of art that lives in you and follows
you around because of your experience with it. It's part of you now
and, for good or ill, that's goddamn impressive."
--Joseph Edwin Haeger, The Big Smoke"This tightly woven feminist
novel is a deep exploration of womanhood spanning decades,
continents, and digital spaces... Virtuoso is a moving book that
defies categorization."
--Wendy J. Fox, BuzzFeed"Haunted and haunting... Told through
multiple unique, compelling voices, the book's time and action are
layered, with possibilities and paths forming rhythmic, syncopated
interludes that emphasize that history is now."
--Letitia Montgomery-Rodgers, Foreword Reviews, starred
review"Moskovich's novel has more in common with David Lynch's
Mulholland Drive than it does with any contemporary piece of
writing... Moskovich breaks almost every rule of contemporary
fiction."
--Kirkus"[Virtuoso] tells the stories of four queer European women
in a filmic, fragmented style... An unexpected reunion ties
together all the stories in an emotionally complex and gratifying
ending."
--Publishers Weekly"Moskovich dwells with indigenous belonging and
a native fluency in the realms of the unseen, the worlds slotted
between worlds, or behind them, a fluttering geography of veils
calling for mirrors, or perhaps for the abolition of mirrors."
--John Biscello, Riot Material Magazine"Virtuoso jumps through time
involving three pairs of sapphic women, ranging from childhood
friends. marriage, and scandal. The paths of these women sync and
blend together like waves, written in an almost abstract form.
These are loves intertwined with melancholy and mystery. I will
admit sometimes I'm not at all sure what is going on, but
nevertheless, I was engaged in its format. As their stories unfold,
you may feel like rereading again and again to put together all the
pieces."
--Andrew King, University Bookstore (Seattle, Washington)"With
incredible characters and sharp narration, Virtuoso illustrates the
many ways in which women don't follow the stereotypes created for
them... Moskovich's second book is told with a sharp tongue and
unusual charm, documenting the lives of a few explosive female
characters."
--Jaylynn Korrell, Independent Book Review"[Virtuoso's] prose is
lyrical."
--June Sawyers, Booklist"The prose poem-esque vignettes that make
up the novel Virtuoso are propulsive and exact and Yelena
Moskovich's language oozes with sensory experience. Taking place in
Prague, Paris, Wisconsin, Boston, and other locations, Virtuoso is
a queer and transnational novel that hypnotically dunks the reader
into every scene."
--Nate McNamara, Lit Hub '12 Books You Should Read in
January'"Readers have to trust Moskovich, as Virtuoso's form is as
carefully composed as its narrative. Virtuoso is compelling for
this clever form as it makes readers question their current
lucidity and the possibility of transcendental love... Moskovich's
novel spills-over with the nuances of existence (and by extension,
co-existence), grounding readers in her dizzying and dreamlike
story of love, friendship, and reconnection."
--Kaityln Yates, The Arkansas International"The author's inimitable
style is both elegant and poetic. By story's end, our characters'
lives amazingly, but not unbelievably, intertwine, skillfully
arranged by Moskovich."
--Virginia Parobek, World Literature Today"Virtuoso is a striking
probe into feminine love and friendships, an examination of the
dichotomy between the individual and the bleeding of self into
other which occurs in relationships. It is an exploration of how to
exist and find meaning in the unbalanced world we live in; a
blurring, off-kilter study of the line between belonging and just
plain longing."
--Beth Mowbray, Nerd Daily"Moskovich's dreamlike prose and
fragmentation make the introduction of the surreal feel natural in
the world she has painted for us."
--Hayley Neiling, Heavy Feather Review"Moskovich writes with the
eye of a film director and the lyricism of a poet..."
--Mallory Miller, Paperback Paris"Virtuoso is novel in the most
original sense, a slice of story carved out of the world and set in
eerie, entrancing motion, a boundary-crossing narrative that
encircles both geopolitical history and the delicate, gestural
inner life of her two female characters, who form themselves in the
midst of their homeland's upheaval. In Moskovich's inspired hands,
language becomes a fragile and shifting musculature, a substance
both firm and ephemeral, simultaneously the stuff of our lives and
the stuff of dreams."
--Alexandra Kleeman, author of You Too Can Have a Body Like
Mine"Although Moskovich displays plenty of pyrotechnics--of
structure, figure and storytelling--the title of her novel isn't
self-referential. She's copped it from a (real) Czech-manufactured
medical mattress for "high-risk patients." As the company says,
"when care is critical, each fibre counts." And indeed, the
author's intricately woven the strands of two, or four, or perhaps
six women's lives into a text that holds them in an uncanny space
for "accelerated wound healing." Through rapturous and sometimes
raucous somniloquies, in hotel suites, lesbian bars, and chat
rooms, her scrappy, hungry, globe-scattered heroines are trying
desperately to keep each other from coming to pieces. Part
Ferrante, part Despentes, Yelena Moskovich is a brutal but
tender-hearted chronicler of women in love."
--Barbara Browning, author of The Gift, I'm Trying to Reach You,
The Correspondence Artist"Like Moskovich's powerful debut The
Natashas, this is a book about the last generation to be born in
the Soviet era and how the fall of communism shaped their social,
sexual and artistic engagement with the world... Moskovich's mother
tongue is Ukrainian, and while her English is faultless, there's a
pleasing otherness about her syntax and word choice, a sense that
there are different languages operating just beneath the surface of
the text. It makes for a reading experience that is always
strikingly original... Virtuoso is a fine, fraught, strange
novel... it will be fascinating to see what she writes next."
--Alex Preston, The Guardian"Virtuoso is powerfully mysterious and
deeply insightful, a page-turner precisely because you have no idea
what to expect. In the era of #MeToo, Moskovich's arrestingly close
and complicated view of lesbian relationships and female friendship
seems more urgent than ever before. But it's perhaps the novel's
defiantly surrealist style that is its greatest triumph; it is in
itself a stirring endorsement of transgression on all fronts.
Virtuoso has the effect of a good poem--inexplicit, mystifying, and
sometimes impenetrable, but in the end producing a vivid and
visceral impression of the subject. The true virtuoso, in both
substance and style, is the author herself."
--Nadia Beard, Los Angeles Review of Books"A hint of Lynch, a touch
of Ferrante, the cruel absurdity of Antonin Artaud, the fierce
candour of Anaïs Nin, the stylish languor of a Lana del Rey song...
Moskovich writes sentences that lilt and slink, her plots
developing as a slow seduction and then clouding like a
smoke-filled room."
--Shahidha Bari, The Guardian"A bold feminist novel: it contains a
world of love and friendship between women in which men and boys
are both indistinct and irrelevant... The Natashas was a
fascinating debut, Virtuoso is even better... It is the Blue Velvet
to her Eraserhead: a fully realized vision of a strange world."
--Katharine Coldiron, Times Literary Supplement
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