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February 4-11, 1945. Yalta, a resort town on the Crimean Peninsula, Soviet Union. The Big Three are posing for a camera. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin. All smiling. Stalin, his head is half a turn away from the other two. A shrewd smirk is hiding behind his walrus mustache. He seems to be pleased. Why wouldn't he be? The Big Three signed the agreement that will shape the fate of Europe and . . . In 1941, Anna is sixteen, almost an adult yet still a child, craving independence and keen to become an operetta actress. Her rosy aspirations are disrupted by the war. When Krasnodar is taken by the Wehrmacht, she is one of the populace who are ordered to repair roads for the occupants' trucks and cars and, in fall, to toil in the fields for the sake of sending the harvest to the enemy's land. A dire event coerces her to go to Germany where she is auctioned as a slave worker. Born in Berlin into an émigré Cossack family, young Zakhary is more interested in books and archeology than in the war that is raging through Europe, even less in the cause of his parents and their friends, which is to overthrow the Bolshevik regime in the Soviet Union and revert to Imperial Russia. He just doesn't want to be a part of it. That is, until he finds himself among the Cossacks fighting alongside the Germans against the Allies. In Italy, he meets Marishka, a young woman of Cossack heritage who fled the Soviet Union with other anti-Soviet Cossacks and departing German troops under the push of the Red Army. They fall in love and marry. And then, on June 1, 1945, Lienz happened. After the war, a ghastly fate propels each of them to the merciless land where skies are leaden gray, frosts plunge below -60°C in winter, and the woods are impenetrable and so vast, there is no escape from there. Anna and Zakhary carry with them their personal wounds, at the same time haunted by unbearable guilt, which they can't undo or fix. In 1955, fate brings them together on an isolated peninsula of the Ob River, connected to one another in inextricably entangled ways they do not yet realize. More than a decade later, can they bury the cruel past and build a future for themselves in the country without Stalin but sealed behind the Iron Curtain?This is their story, relived in one day. "Every once in a while, you come across a story in a book that stays with you, the memories from scenes etched into your gray matter-the emotions you felt fresh, as if witnessing them in this alive, present moment. These are the stories that become classics, like Doctor Zhivago and I use that title intentionally, for I am reminded of the depth of Pasternak's work, having just read Osipova's novel The Drau River Flows to Siberia: The Victims of Victory. Just as Yuri Andreyevich Zhivago and Larissa "Lara" Antipova have stayed with me, so have Osipova's characters Anna and Zakhary. This is no ordinary war-torn story, it is a cultural masterpiece that opens a window into life in Russia and Austria and the impact of WW2 on ordinary people."-Paulette Mahurin, an internationally acclaimed author, a recipient of prestigious awards, and #1 Bestselling Amazon Author "Fiction and reality mix in Marina Osipova's remarkable book. This story is dark and emotionally charged; it enthralled me to the very last page. It captures postwar events which to this day very few know about. The Drau River Flows to Siberia: The Victims of Victory pulled me into my own family's experiences and made me feel the heartbreaking trauma of that time in a deeply personal way. For me, it was not just a casual story. This thought-provoking tale is powerful, realistic, and will stay with me for a long time."-Tania Amochaev, author of One Hundred Years of Exile: A Romanov's Search For Her Father's Russia
"It is necessary to defend each position, each meter of our territory, up to the last drop of blood, to cling for each plot of Soviet land and to defend it as long as possible." - from Order No. 227.Based on the actual events on the Eastern Front of World War II, this short story is a rare account of a Soviet penal company, told from a perspective of a real person, the military prosecutor, Jakov Antonovich Krivenkov, and a fictional character, an ordinary Russian woman, Matryona, both caught in the horror of an impossible situation. 427,910 Soviet men shed their blood in defending their motherland in penal military units. They were to stop the enemy regardless of cost. Eighty percent of them did not survive. This is the story of thirteen of them.
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