cover image Street Without a Name: Childhood and Other Misadventures in Bulgaria

Street Without a Name: Childhood and Other Misadventures in Bulgaria

Kapka Kassabova. Skyhorse Publishing, $24.95 (348pp) ISBN 978-1-60239-645-6

Novelist, poet and travel writer Kassabova takes a meandering, bittersweet journey through her native Bulgaria, where she grew up in the last decade and a half of the Cold War. Her chilling, panoramic view of life under Communism is perhaps best caught in her memory of the ""rumored disaster at Chernobyl,"" vehemently denied by the Bulgarian government; just as nuclear rain began t fall, the citizens were forced into the streets for a mandatory May Day celebration that left many to fall sick and die within the year. Kassabova's personal history, like her country's, is full of complex characters and overwhelming challenges; one of her grandfathers, she realized later, was a homosexual struggling in a country that forbade it, and Kassabova herself developed teenage anorexia: ""If you can't do anything to the world around you, you do it to yourself."" Written following her return visit as a 34-year-old ""global soul,"" Kassabova finds the country she left at 17 still devastated, but with a new measure of hope. Kassabova's tendency to travel two or three decades in a single paragraph can make her a challenge to follow, and she too often gets lost in day-to-day minutia; though engaging and illuminating as is, a more rigorous edit could have made this memoir a page turner.