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Rouch Swalwe
Irkadura is a heart-rending story with characters who live and breathe. Their words and thoughts shook me, then calmed me, then took me into straight into moving spheres of emotion. The mouse scurried quickly into worlds I've known must exist, but she made me follow her. Ksenia Anske writes in color and sound, with such vibrancy and honesty, that I cannot help but know with all of my senses what I did not know before reading this excellent, excellent book.
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Rachel Barnard
You know who you are, Irina Myshko? You’re not a mouse and you’re not an eagle, you’re just a dumb mute dura. You’ve never talked and you never will. (Locations 2920-2921). Irkadura is not dumb, she just said the wrong word at the wrong time to the wrong woman (Locations 917-918) and at the age of two was scarred into a PTSD like silence. Her silence travels with her, affecting her life and how people view her. Most think of her as crazy, stupid, without opinion or protest, or as an invalid. The government has issued her a certificate of disability, which she uses to get a job at a local theatre. Irina is not just mute, but she refers to people as animals. Her mama is a catfish, the man who raped her is a boar and the boy who she is entranced by is a butterfly. Irina herself is a mouse, a timid creature that is stomped and crushed and bitten. What is Irina's reality? She escapes as much as possible from the unbelievable horrors of her life through the animals that she imagines inhabiting her environment. Her reality is so horrible and unreal that the only way she can escape is by doing something drastic, to take her mind away. For this, most think she is stupid or crazy.
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aditya thakur
Irkadura is a book that will make you cringe and yet still want to continue reading and you'll hate yourself for that and you'll hate Ksenia Anske for making you hate yourself but you'll also love her for writing this book full of awful and wonderful things that made you engage with such strong emotions as love and hate.