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Sentiments offensés

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Dans une ville de province russe, le corps sans vie du ministre Andreï Liamzine est retrouvé sous la pluie battante. Qui a bien pu vouloir l’éliminer ? Sa mort est le point de départ d’une enquête parsemée de turbulences et ressemblant surtout à une chasse aux sorcières dans une petite société locale gangrenée par la séduction du pouvoir.
Tous les personnages qui ont gravité autour de Liamzine vont tenter de se disculper, essayant de grappiller au passage quelque privilège ou protection supplémentaire. Au fil des jours, l’enquête va lever le voile sur chacun des cercles de cette ville où la corruption règne en maître.
Roman prémonitoire, Sentiments offensés offre un portrait féroce de la société russe contemporaine, combinant brillamment comédie satirique et peinture réaliste, et nous interroge à la fois sur le passé et l’avenir de ce pays.

256 pages, Paperback

Published February 6, 2025

3 people are currently reading
222 people want to read

About the author

Alisa Ganieva

11 books46 followers
Alisa Ganieva (or Ganiyeva; Russian: Алиса Аркадьевна Ганиева) is a Russian author, writing short prose and essays. In 2009, she was awarded the Debut literary prize for her debut novel Salaam, Dalgat!, published using the pseudonym of Gulla Khirachev.

Ganieva was born in Moscow in an Avar family but moved with her family to Dagestan, where she lived in Gunib and later attended school in Makhachkala. In 2002 she moved back to Moscow and graduated from the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute. She works as a literary critic for the Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily.

She won the Debut literary prize, the under-25 competition for authors writing in Russian, in 2009 for Salaam, Dalgat!. The identity of the author, who published it pseudonymously, was only discovered at the award ceremony. The novel describes the everyday life of Dagestani youth in the cities and shows the decay of traditional life and their difficult relations with Islam, the traditional religion of Dagestanis. The characters use the "Dagestani Russian", a pidgin version of Russian, to communicate, the first instance when this was presented in a literary work.

In 2012, Ganieva published her second novel, Holiday Mountain, also set in Dagestan. In 2014, it was translated to German. In 2015 the Italian and the american translations came out. The last one published by the Deep Vellum Publishing House (USA) is called "The Mountain And The Wall". Ganieva spoke about the book to the audience of the London bureau of the Voice Of Russia radio.

In April 2015 her new novel "The Bride And The Bridegroom" was released in Russia and is already listed for the major literary awards.

She also published short stories and fairy tales. She has received a number of literary awards for her fiction.

In June 2015 Ganieva was listed by The Guardian as one of the most talented and influential young people living in Moscow.[

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5 stars
16 (19%)
4 stars
28 (34%)
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27 (33%)
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3 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Nadia Clifford.
61 reviews
September 10, 2023
Offended Sensibilities offers a very dark view into the realities of an average town somewhere in Russia — corruption, absence of any morality or ethics, flaunting of ill-gained and fleeting wealth, and snitching. Everyone snitches on everyone; nobody is safe from the deadly snitching machine. Human life is nothing more than an afterthought.

Ganieva paints the town with harsh satire that is, sadly, too close to reality. She does not let in even a glimmer of light. There is not a single character that gains the reader's empathy.

Who did she write this novel for? I doubt the Russians who live this reality daily would want to read this painful noir satire. The book, albeit fast and entertaining read, leaves the reader with dim desperation, powerlessness, and disgust. What many Russians feel daily without having to turn to literature.
This book may be for us, the outsiders looking in. So we know exactly how they feel...

PS I listened to this book on audio in Russian.
Profile Image for Liza.
493 reviews70 followers
November 5, 2020
если кратко: вместо этой книги лучше бы я пересмотрела «последнего министра».
если подлиннее: персонажи картонные, автор пытается рассказать их прошлое, объяснить их настоящее, но эти истории всё равно будто рождены 3D-принтером. у ганиевой ужасны все, все почему-то тупые, некрасивые, злые. наверно, ей кажется, такой должна быть сатира — безусловно злой, но какой смысл высмеивать коррупцию и сталинизм, если не сочувствуешь хотя бы немного людям, которые воруют и верят в эффективного менеджера. у автора нет чувства ритма и чувства стиля, простые вещи описаны сложно и заковыристо, сложные — одномерно. вся книга — как запутанный лес, бессмысленный и страшный.
Profile Image for Austin.
186 reviews10 followers
October 22, 2023
This is a well-written drama showcasing many aspects of modern Russian life with wit, restraint, humor, and even surpassing tenderness at moments. Of course it ends in great tragedy as a warning of excesses of zeal, especially a fear-based nationalist zeal.

The excerpt that cuts through the entire drama for me is:

--"And Siga would touch her shoulder and say, 'Oh, Lena, you're such a. . .' And that would be all. And he would walk away." pg. 237

It's my favorite because it shows that Lenochka, despite the ugliness of her deeds and circumstances, is a tender young girl with subtle but powerful dreams, so pure and lovable at heart. As we all were as children.
Profile Image for Michaela.
420 reviews8 followers
August 19, 2023
Lost stars because of how actually disappointing this one was. I couldn’t keep track of or care about the characters, and the whole book seemed to not really go anywhere and just end where it started, emotionally and thoughtfully, at least. It is a *very* Russian crime?-comedy?-satire? but ultimately it just did not keep my attention. Would’ve DNFed if it hadn’t been one of my women in translation month picks.
Profile Image for 122hrsfear.
2 reviews
May 30, 2023
Decent plotting and characters, weighed down with clunky prose (maybe it sounds better in Russian?) and a flimsy ending. Good sense of atmosphere at its strongest points, preachy at its weakest. Wants you to know “PUTINISM IS BAD” without weaving it into the main thrust of the plot.
Profile Image for Olivia.
85 reviews3 followers
March 13, 2023
thought-provoking political drama on modern Russia
95 reviews
July 29, 2024
"That Stalin, despite all the excesses of the repressions, was an effective manager."
Profile Image for Nelli.
55 reviews3 followers
August 16, 2024
mix out of Bulgakovs wit and comic with Gogol provincal corruption stories
Profile Image for Simone.
100 reviews
September 14, 2024
Dystopian satire about life in modern/post Soviet Russia. None of the characters are particularly likable, but they are not supposed to be. I found the book entertaining and I liked the author’s commentary on the ridiculous pomp, abuses of power, and scheming that occur in everyday life in Putin’s Russia.
5 reviews
October 3, 2019
Как будто перечитал ленту фейсбука или подборку курьезов и маразма из новостей — и непонятно зачем.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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