After reading the memoirs of Авраам Шифрин, I became interested in Russian/Soviet Zionists and fight of Jews for their own state. Of course, I could not ignore Владимир Жаботинский, "лидер правого сионизма, основатель и идеолог движения сионистов-ревизионистов, создатель Еврейского легиона и организаций «Иргун» и «Бейтар»; писатель, поэт, публицист, журналист, переводчик," who was born and raised in Odesa. Plus, he was a friend of Корней Чуковский -- what else do you need?!
So, when I saw this book and words "автобиографический роман" in the annotation, I thought that it was memoirs of Владимир Жаботинский himself and was eager to read it. Well, it is memoirs to some degree, of course, but it's essentially a story of another family, which Жаботинский considered very interesting and worth of remembering as a prominent portrait of the lost epoch. Therefore, my introduction to the life of Владимир Жаботинский is yet to come.
As for this book, it was interesting and not interesting reading simultaneously. I was pleasantly surprised by a very rich, dynamic, and maybe somewhat too flowery style of the author, but no doubts original and proficient. The family presented is also quite curious and peculiar in many aspects, but it was not the epoch and/or social layer I am usually interested in, and there are too many "vaudevillish" characters and behaviours for me, so the plot itself was not my cup of tea (I understand that this is not fiction, this is a real story about real people, and it might rightly look extraordinary for those who knew this family; I just do not like such stories, you know). However, you can notice a lot of entertaining and thought-provoking details about the life in Odesa on the cusp of the 19th and 20th centuries, when there was not even a hint for the impending revolution, but it was already not "the good old 19th century." ("Первые годы века тогда у нас назывались «весна» в смысле общественного и государственного пробуждения, а для моего поколения совпали также с личной весной в смысле подлинной двадцатилетней молодости.")
The story of Мильгром's family is unwraping on the background of the First World War, and awakening of liberal society, and first attempts of organized and armed resistance of Jews to pogroms, etc. I believe that anyone who is interested in this epoch will find a lot of fascinating details for reflection. Wikipedia writes about the book that is was "одно из лучших прозаических произведений 1930-х годов, однако почти не привлекшее внимание критики, но переизданное в России и Беларуси в 2000-х гг.," so probably I am just not the best critic to judge about it.