Inspired by a wide range influences including early-twentieth century Russian avant-gardists, British science fiction and dystopian novels, as well as contemporary American novelists Specimenis a highly original collection of stories that explore the place where physical reality collides with our spiritual and emotional lives.
In Mamochka,” nominated for the 2012 Journey Prize, an archivist at the Institute for Physics in Minsk, must come to terms with her daughter’s marriage to a Chinese man in Vancouver. In Peptide P,” scientists study a disease of the heart that seems to affect children after they eat hotdogs. In Side Effects,” a woman’s personality is altered by botox injections. In Specimen” a teenage girl discovers that she was conceived using a sperm donor. In The Big One,” a woman and her daughter find themselves trapped in the rubble of an underground parking garage after an earthquake. In The Blood Keeper,” a novella, a young academic travels to North Korea to work on her dissertation and embarks on a dangerous affair.
These stories of science, unfamiliar landscapes, and all-too-familiar heartbreaks are a vehicle for Kovalyova’s bold experimentation with the short fiction form. Kovalyova is a lecturer in molecular biology at Vancouver’s Simon Fraser University, and this is a debut collection that successfully and gracefully bridges the divide between the worlds of art and science. -Publishers Weekly
A first collection that explores intersections between different cultures and between science and love. Through it all, though, Kovalyova's stories remain large-hearted and generous toward their characters as they struggle to make sense of the strange worlds around them
tenderly wrought, collection. -Kirkus
The facts of sex and inheritance cannot explain away human emotion in this strló&