Olga Zilberbourg is the author of a short story collection published in Russia, where she was born in 1979, as well as the collection Like Water and Other Stories. She received a BS in international business from the Rochester Institute of Technology and an MA in comparative literature from San Francisco State University. Her essay on Lydia Chukovskaya, a Soviet writer and poet who devoted her career to defending dissidents such as Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov, accompanies two works of Chukovskaya’s fiction. Zilberbourg is a consulting editor of Narrative and lives in San Francisco.

The Swallow

A Story

by Olga Zilberbourg

Take this man, Stepan. He survived the winter of 1992 without heat or running water in his grandfather’s apartment in downtown Yerevan. What a feat of entrepreneurship and ingenuity! He bought a wood-burning stove at a time when others still counted on having electricity to get them through the winter, and the things he fed into it, and the way he tells it! There he sits now, in a fully Chekhovian setting on the terrace of my parents’ house on the outskirts of Moscow, his eagle brow and crooked nose looming over a flowery teacup. Outside, a powder of snow is settling on the graveled paths, and yellow leaves are stuck frozen to the frostbitten grass of the overgrown lawn. A neurotic dog, invisible behind the tall fence of our neighbor’s yard, is barking at the slightest gusting of wind. Inside, we’re gathered around an oval table, remnants of pasta cooked in rancid truffle oil squirming on our plates.

People on couch
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