cover image The New Adventures of Helen

The New Adventures of Helen

Ludmilla Petrushevskaya, trans. from the Russian by Jane Bugaeva. Deep Vellum, $16.95 trade paper (356p) ISBN 978-1-64605-103-8

The tales in Petrushevskaya’s whimsical and allegorical latest (after the memoir The Girl from the Metropol Hotel) turns on themes of love, virtue, and suffering. The title story follows a reborn, “dumb as a doornail” Helen of Troy in her quest to overcome a wizard’s spell and find love without starting a war. In “The Prince with Gold Hair,” a queen accused of infidelity is banished from her kingdom with her infant son, whose gold hair attracts opportunists of all sorts. A witch prophesies teenaged twin sisters will turn against each other because of a man in “Nettle and Raspberry,” the jewel of the bunch, which has a nuance lacking in the other stories as well as fully developed characters rather than the caricatures found elsewhere. “Two Sisters” features a pair of octogenarian women who are each granted a new life after finding a magic ointment. The painter in “The Story of an Artist” finds a magic canvas that can change his future. The lone story without a supernatural element follows the madcap adventures of “Queen Lir,” who is so coddled she can’t get bread out of a bag, and her equally naive great-granddaughter as they try to assert some independence. These imaginative stories entertain, and occasionally they edify as well. (Nov.)