Issue 4354. Last Updated: 03/22/2010

12/15/2006

Paid access archive

Deep Thoughts on 'Dozor'

A group of leading Russian intellectuals breaks through the pop-culture barrier and analyzes ""Night Watch"" and ""Day Watch"" in a new book.

Wanted

Sveta and Dima are not gunrunners. They are simply conduits, ever ready to help people sidestep the tedious Russian bureaucracy.

The Violent Femmes

Iva Nova, an energetic all-female band from St. Petersburg, brings its mix of punk and folk music to Dom.

Crimean Enterprise

British film director Robert Crombie helps start a new movie studio in Yalta.

Salon

Lyudmila Ulitskaya, usually a rather traditional author, has ventured into some new areas with ""Daniel Stein, Interpreter.""

Bewitched

Philip Sington is far from the first to fall under Zoia Korvin-Krukovsky's spell in his historical detective novel about the femme fatale and survivor of the Romanov court.

'R' Is for Revolution

An exhibition shows how various 20th-century artists tackled the genre of the children's alphabet primer, from the symbolism of the Silver Age to 1920s communist propaganda.

Husbands and Wives

Works by James Joyce and Gabriel Garcia Marquez provide inspiration for two plays about wives chafing at the limits of their unfulfilling marriages.

Image

A new exhibition by Viktor Pivovarov opens Friday at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art on Yermolayevsky Pereulok.

In the Spotlight

Most of the singers at Channel One's New Year concert didn't overstretch their vocal cords, and I've never seen so many unplugged electric guitars.


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