Not only does she owe her publisher a book, but the one she’s working on — the one we’ve just been reading — fills her with shame. It deals in clichés about Ukraine — especially the bride business — clichés that pander to Western readers. And the war makes things even worse. How dare Maria write from the safety of Canada about the home country that’s currently fighting for its life?
After a bevy of metafictional hijinks, Reva eventually takes us back to war-torn Ukraine where Yeva, Nastia, and Sol must figure out what to do with their bachelors. I won’t say what happens, but I do want to assure you that all of Reva’s many strands — the war, the snails, the bride business, the kidnapping, Maria’s writerly anxiety and family ties — dovetail brilliantly.
Along the way, characters get gunned down, schlemiels become heroic, and we wonder whether Ukraine, like Lefty the snail, might be an endling?
One can’t juggle all these balls without being a nifty writer, and Reva is that. I wish I could read you the delightful page-long passage in which Yeva explains why snails are marvelous. But it’s too long. So instead, here is Yeva thinking bitterly about why they’re not popular:
Snails weren’t pandas — those oversize bumbling toddlers that sucked up national conservation budgets — or any of the other charismatic megafauna, like orcas or gorillas. Snails weren’t huggy koala bears, which in reality were vicious and riddled with chlamydia. Nor were snails otters, which looked like plush toys made for mascots by aquariums, despite the fact that they lured dogs from beaches to drown and rape them.
A crunch under the boot. A speck to flick off a lettuce leaf. … Snails were just that — snails.
Of course, Yeva and Reva believe that snails, like Ukraine itself, may not be adored by the world at large but deserve to survive, and even thrive in a world that threatens them with extinction. Indeed, for all her humor and brio — she’s never, ever preachy — Reva knows what she’s joking about. Suffused with yearning for what’s being lost, Endling leaves you asking one painful question: When creatures or nations are fighting for their very existence, shouldn’t we try to help them?
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‘Endling’ by Maria Reva is out now, via Penguin Random House.