A visceral, stirring novel following a queer literature student traveling across Russia with her estranged father, a long haul truck driver secretly dying of AIDS, from the acclaimed author of Wound.
A decade after her father walks out on her family, the narrator of Steppe, now a literature student, decides to spend some time with him on the road as he makes deliveries across the vast plains of Russia. She's attracted and repulsed by his rugged life as a trucker, eager to reckon with the ways he's imprinted on her, to understand the person who made her, to witness their family likenesses.
But the prematurely aged, drug-ruined man secretly being consumed by AIDS who meets her at the train station has little revelation to offer her yearning heart. As he drives her across a severe landscape in his freight truck, the narrator reflects on her father's role as a small piece of the extensive, violent patriarchal structure of Russian society and the post-Soviet chaos of the 1990s. Always humming in the background, the austere beauty and mercurial nature of the steppe reminds her of the contradictions at the heart of their relationship—both natural and forced; intimate and estranged.
Oksana Vasyakina's second novel of aching familial hurt pierces the surface of human relations and reaches into the depths of shame, longing, and grief that lie beneath. In simple, precise prose she paints a vivid portrait of estrangement and situates it in the broader context of her country's attempts to reckon with its troubled history.
"An elegiac tribute to a fatally flawed bond." —Kirkus Reviews
"In this compassionate and clear-eyed character study, Vasyakina traces the bond between a rough-hewn Siberian truck driver and his queer daughter...Vasyakina assembles a thoughtful and necessarily incomplete portrait of the father from the narrator's musings on the harshness and violence of the post-Soviet era that shaped him. It's a satisfying examination of how well a father and daughter can know one another." —Publishers Weekly
"Short but haunting ... [Steppe] is part of a trilogy investigating the deaths of members of Vasyakina's family. But it is also a portrait of a certain class of Russians, and by extension the history of Russia itself ... [An] intensely observant book." —Andrew Holleran, The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide
"A family history, a road trip through contemporary Russia, Steppe is as unflinching and capacious as the landscape from which it takes its name. Vasyakina is a rare truthsayer, a voice of her generation. I loved this." —Jessi Jezewska Stevens, author of Ghost Pains
This information about Steppe was first featured
in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.
Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Oksana Vasyakina is a Russian poet and curator. Her debut poetry collection, Women's Prose, was short-listed for the Andrei Bely Prize in 2016, and her debut novel, Wound, won the NOS Prize in 2021.

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