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In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia
In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

Hamilton Spectator

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Hamilton Spectator

In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

It's hard to be a 10-year-old girl. This is especially true if you're Vera Bradford-Shmulkin, a Russian Korean child navigating the intricacies of playground politics amid rising fascism in America. In Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, 'Vera, or Faith,' the young, precocious Vera lives in Manhattan with her Jewish Russian father ('Daddy'), a struggling magazine editor preoccupied with cultural capital, and her Protestant New England stepmother ('Anne Mom'), a liberal housewife who spends her time organizing political salons. There's also Dylan, their darling blond-haired son, who relied on Vera's legacy status for admission into a highly competitive public school. Rounding out this ultra-modern family unit are Stella, a sardonic self-driving car, and Kaspie, a chess robot that excels at Danish Gambit openings and dispensing personal advice in equal measure. Outside their apartment every week, protesters flood the streets for March of the Hated, a movement in favour of an enhanced vote, worth five-thirds of a regular vote, for 'those who landed on the shores of our continent before or during the Revolutionary War but were exceptional enough not to arrive in chains.' Terrified and heartbroken by these misguided crusaders, Vera one day finds herself assigned to the pro-Five-Three side in a class debate and must learn their arguments in order to win. Her debate partner is Yumi, a student from Japan whom she desperately wishes to befriend and, like Vera, would be cruelly excluded from an enhanced vote. Meanwhile, Vera's parents' marriage is slowly disintegrating, prompting her to draft reasons for each of them to stay together. On a list intended for her father, she appeals to his longing for proximity to the intelligentsia and a comfortable life, writing, 'Went to Brown for graduate school. Makes a lot of delectable 'WASP lunches' for all of us. Is Five-Three which will keep us safe.' On the list for her mother, Vera highlights her father's resilience and artistic efforts: 'Survived his parents and immigration, so can survive anything. Speaks two languages. His long struggle for full recognition is about to be over.' 'Vera, or Faith,' by Gary Shteyngart, Random House, 256 pages, $37.99. Vera's observations subtly point to the central tension within her family: between stated political affiliations and actions taken in one's own domain. Her father is a morally superior leftist who dismisses her stay-at-home mother as a 'tradwife,' despite happily living off her trust fund as he attempts to court a Rhodesian billionaire to buy his magazine. Though she carries out meal preparation and school drop-offs, he declares, 'Labor's my jam. You can actually make a difference with labor.' Her mother lays claim to progressive beliefs, but it's not clear whether her fundraising events are motivated by a desire to enact meaningful change or mere optics. She seems insistent on smoothing over Vera's idiosyncrasies, such as compulsive arm flapping and reciting large vocabulary words, instructing her to mirror the other girls at school. At home, she pays Vera to arrange her bookshelf not alphabetically or by genre, but in a manner where 'authors of color, and women were front and center.' For both parents, the domestic space is a battlefield where political disagreements are fought, rather than where children are guided and supported. One evening, Vera eavesdrops on a conversation between her parents, leading her to believe she must urgently find 'Mom Mom,' her birth mother. Toward this goal, she enlists the help of Yumi, who eagerly assists in playing detective, using her precious weekly four hours of internet use to guess common Korean surnames and cross-reference candidates with alumni of Vera's father's alma mater. An ideal co-conspirator and confidante, Yumi shows Vera what being in touch with one's cultural heritage can look like, what she could gain if their search proved successful, and what had been absent from her upbringing. Told from Vera's eye level, the novel seizes her sense of wonder to draw attention to the absurdity of contemporary life in America. In Shteyngart's near-future, popular kids attend algebra and violin camp over the summer in New York, and two states away, a mandatory 'Holmes' pregnancy blood test — named after the infamous Theranos founder — must be administered to women of reproductive age entering and exiting Ohio. We, as readers, acquire knowledge of the new normal alongside our innocent protagonist to a disturbing effect. Unlike her parents, whose convictions have formed and hardened, Vera has not yet fallen into despair, inaction or the trap of identity politics. As such, her naivety serves as a strategy to question assumptions and attitudes across the political spectrum, to approach lofty subjects without the baggage of labels. Where other novels from the perspective of children might feel tedious or contrived, 'Vera, or Faith' remains sharp and engaging while addressing the obstacles of language and narration. When Shteyngart's wit threatens to shatter the illusion, he pulls back by having Vera quote her father, phrases that are recorded in a 'Things I Still Need to Know Diary.' For instance, there's 'Maginot Line,' a defensive line of fortification to prevent the invasion of Nazi Germany into France, used to refer to the living room in their increasingly volatile home. Other entries simply include words like 'pontificate' or 'gregariously' that would be unlikely to appear in the lexicons of even the most studious fifth graders. To that end, Shteyngart sustains Vera's interiority, inviting readers into the mind of a child who is bright and exuberant, yet ultimately vulnerable and helpless within the structures of centuries-old institutions. Between holding her family together, finding her biological mother and thriving at school, Vera has plenty to deal with, though the 256-page novel always maintains a buoyancy. Miraculously, Shteyngart manages to braid these struggles of identity, class, love and belonging into a story that reflects the condition of modern life without didacticism. Even in the fourth and final section, where Vera's mission reaches a critical point, readers will sail through the startling revelation about her maternal family and the circumstances surrounding her birth, perhaps to a fault. The exhilarating conclusion races toward the finish line with all the answers we've waited for, leaving us breathless and emotionally dangling. For the most part, however, Shteyngart's latest novel is a charming, bittersweet coming-of-age narrative that seamlessly incorporates the ridiculousness of American politics into a bildungsroman with heart. At once delightful and tragic, our fierce heroine recalls to us the joys and pains of preadolescence and, more importantly, serves as a necessary reminder to resist a dystopia that promises to arrive with every passing year, month and day.

In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia
In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

Toronto Star

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Toronto Star

In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

It's hard to be a 10-year-old girl. This is especially true if you're Vera Bradford-Shmulkin, a Russian Korean child navigating the intricacies of playground politics amid rising fascism in America. In Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, 'Vera, or Faith,' the young, precocious Vera lives in Manhattan with her Jewish Russian father ('Daddy'), a struggling magazine editor preoccupied with cultural capital, and her Protestant New England stepmother ('Anne Mom'), a liberal housewife who spends her time organizing political salons. There's also Dylan, their darling blond-haired son, who relied on Vera's legacy status for admission into a highly competitive public school. Rounding out this ultra-modern family unit are Stella, a sardonic self-driving car, and Kaspie, a chess robot that excels at Danish Gambit openings and dispensing personal advice in equal measure. Winnie Wang is a writer and film programmer whose work has been featured in Cinema Scope, Documentary magazine and Little White Lies.

Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia
Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

Toronto Star

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Toronto Star

Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

It's hard to be a 10-year-old girl. This is especially true if you're Vera Bradford-Shmulkin, a Russian Korean child navigating the intricacies of playground politics amid rising fascism in America. In Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, 'Vera, or Faith,' the young, precocious Vera lives in Manhattan with her Jewish Russian father ('Daddy'), a struggling magazine editor preoccupied with cultural capital, and her Protestant New England stepmother ('Anne Mom'), a liberal housewife who spends her time organizing political salons. There's also Dylan, their darling blond-haired son, who relied on Vera's legacy status for admission into a highly competitive public school. Rounding out this ultra-modern family unit are Stella, a sardonic self-driving car, and Kaspie, a chess robot that excels at Danish Gambit openings and dispensing personal advice in equal measure. Winnie Wang is a writer and film programmer whose work has been featured in Cinema Scope, Documentary magazine and Little White Lies.

Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia
Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

Hamilton Spectator

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Hamilton Spectator

Review: In Gary Shteyngart's bittersweet novel ‘Vera, or Faith,' a Russian Korean girl comes of age in an American dystopia

It's hard to be a 10-year-old girl. This is especially true if you're Vera Bradford-Shmulkin, a Russian Korean child navigating the intricacies of playground politics amid rising fascism in America. In Gary Shteyngart's latest novel, 'Vera, or Faith,' the young, precocious Vera lives in Manhattan with her Jewish Russian father ('Daddy'), a struggling magazine editor preoccupied with cultural capital, and her Protestant New England stepmother ('Anne Mom'), a liberal housewife who spends her time organizing political salons. There's also Dylan, their darling blond-haired son, who relied on Vera's legacy status for admission into a highly competitive public school. Rounding out this ultra-modern family unit are Stella, a sardonic self-driving car, and Kaspie, a chess robot that excels at Danish Gambit openings and dispensing personal advice in equal measure. Outside their apartment every week, protesters flood the streets for March of the Hated, a movement in favour of an enhanced vote, worth five-thirds of a regular vote, for 'those who landed on the shores of our continent before or during the Revolutionary War but were exceptional enough not to arrive in chains.' Terrified and heartbroken by these misguided crusaders, Vera one day finds herself assigned to the pro-Five-Three side in a class debate and must learn their arguments in order to win. Her debate partner is Yumi, a student from Japan whom she desperately wishes to befriend and, like Vera, would be cruelly excluded from an enhanced vote. Meanwhile, Vera's parents' marriage is slowly disintegrating, prompting her to draft reasons for each of them to stay together. On a list intended for her father, she appeals to his longing for proximity to the intelligentsia and a comfortable life, writing, 'Went to Brown for graduate school. Makes a lot of delectable 'WASP lunches' for all of us. Is Five-Three which will keep us safe.' On the list for her mother, Vera highlights her father's resilience and artistic efforts: 'Survived his parents and immigration, so can survive anything. Speaks two languages. His long struggle for full recognition is about to be over.' 'Vera, or Faith,' by Gary Shteyngart, Random House, 256 pages, $37.99. Vera's observations subtly point to the central tension within her family: between stated political affiliations and actions taken in one's own domain. Her father is a morally superior leftist who dismisses her stay-at-home mother as a 'tradwife,' despite happily living off her trust fund as he attempts to court a Rhodesian billionaire to buy his magazine. Though she carries out meal preparation and school drop-offs, he declares, 'Labor's my jam. You can actually make a difference with labor.' Her mother lays claim to progressive beliefs, but it's not clear whether her fundraising events are motivated by a desire to enact meaningful change or mere optics. She seems insistent on smoothing over Vera's idiosyncrasies, such as compulsive arm flapping and reciting large vocabulary words, instructing her to mirror the other girls at school. At home, she pays Vera to arrange her bookshelf not alphabetically or by genre, but in a manner where 'authors of color, and women were front and center.' For both parents, the domestic space is a battlefield where political disagreements are fought, rather than where children are guided and supported. One evening, Vera eavesdrops on a conversation between her parents, leading her to believe she must urgently find 'Mom Mom,' her birth mother. Toward this goal, she enlists the help of Yumi, who eagerly assists in playing detective, using her precious weekly four hours of internet use to guess common Korean surnames and cross-reference candidates with alumni of Vera's father's alma mater. An ideal co-conspirator and confidante, Yumi shows Vera what being in touch with one's cultural heritage can look like, what she could gain if their search proved successful, and what had been absent from her upbringing. Told from Vera's eye level, the novel seizes her sense of wonder to draw attention to the absurdity of contemporary life in America. In Shteyngart's near-future, popular kids attend algebra and violin camp over the summer in New York, and two states away, a mandatory 'Holmes' pregnancy blood test — named after the infamous Theranos founder — must be administered to women of reproductive age entering and exiting Ohio. We, as readers, acquire knowledge of the new normal alongside our innocent protagonist to a disturbing effect. Unlike her parents, whose convictions have formed and hardened, Vera has not yet fallen into despair, inaction or the trap of identity politics. As such, her naivety serves as a strategy to question assumptions and attitudes across the political spectrum, to approach lofty subjects without the baggage of labels. Where other novels from the perspective of children might feel tedious or contrived, 'Vera, or Faith' remains sharp and engaging while addressing the obstacles of language and narration. When Shteyngart's wit threatens to shatter the illusion, he pulls back by having Vera quote her father, phrases that are recorded in a 'Things I Still Need to Know Diary.' For instance, there's 'Maginot Line,' a defensive line of fortification to prevent the invasion of Nazi Germany into France, used to refer to the living room in their increasingly volatile home. Other entries simply include words like 'pontificate' or 'gregariously' that would be unlikely to appear in the lexicons of even the most studious fifth graders. To that end, Shteyngart sustains Vera's interiority, inviting readers into the mind of a child who is bright and exuberant, yet ultimately vulnerable and helpless within the structures of centuries-old institutions. Between holding her family together, finding her biological mother and thriving at school, Vera has plenty to deal with, though the 256-page novel always maintains a buoyancy. Miraculously, Shteyngart manages to braid these struggles of identity, class, love and belonging into a story that reflects the condition of modern life without didacticism. Even in the fourth and final section, where Vera's mission reaches a critical point, readers will sail through the startling revelation about her maternal family and the circumstances surrounding her birth, perhaps to a fault. The exhilarating conclusion races toward the finish line with all the answers we've waited for, leaving us breathless and emotionally dangling. For the most part, however, Shteyngart's latest novel is a charming, bittersweet coming-of-age narrative that seamlessly incorporates the ridiculousness of American politics into a bildungsroman with heart. At once delightful and tragic, our fierce heroine recalls to us the joys and pains of preadolescence and, more importantly, serves as a necessary reminder to resist a dystopia that promises to arrive with every passing year, month and day.

$75K in Rewards Announced for Valhalla's First-Ever Tournament
$75K in Rewards Announced for Valhalla's First-Ever Tournament

Business Insider

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Business Insider

$75K in Rewards Announced for Valhalla's First-Ever Tournament

Miami, Florida, July 25th, 2025, Chainwire Floki's flagship metaverse game, Valhalla, is kicking off its first major tournament — and there's $75,000 worth of prizes on the line for the top 64 contenders. Designed as a competitive battleground for players worldwide, Valhalla blends strategy, skill, and blockchain-powered gameplay in a Norse-inspired metaverse. Players control powerful creatures called Veras and battle in fast-paced, 3v3 turn-based combat — and now, the stakes are higher than ever. The tournament format consists of three concurrent single-elimination bracket tournaments will run simultaneously every two months. Each tournament starts with a qualification phase, where players compete in up to three matches. A win earns one point — and the top 64 scorers from each tournament move on to the Main Event. If players are tied, ELO rankings determine who advances. The Main Event is a six-round, 64-player single-elimination bracket, where only one winner will rise to the top. Choose your tournament wisely — you can only enter one per cycle. Each match is 3v3 only, and special rules apply, including shorter turn times and no draws. Prize Pool Highlights The tournament boasts a massive prize pool totaling over $75,000, all paid out in $FLOKI. The champion will walk away with $25,000, while the runner-up earns $10,000. Semi-finalists (3rd and 4th place) will each receive $5,000. Those who place 5th through 8th will get $2,000 apiece, followed by $1,000 prizes for 9th to 16th place. Players ranking from 17th to 32nd will earn $500 each, and even those finishing between 33rd and 64th won't go home empty-handed — they'll receive $200 each for making it into the bracket. The Valhalla tournament is a global competition designed to spotlight the best players in the ecosystem. Whether you're a seasoned Vera strategist or a rising star in the metaverse, this is your chance to etch your name into Valhalla history. An official date announcement and access to the signup portal are expected to be released shortly. For more details, users can visit About Valhalla Valhalla is a blockchain-based MMORPG inspired by Norse mythology, offering players the chance to discover, tame, and battle with creatures called Veras. The game features a player-driven economy and a hexagonal battlefield designed for dynamic combat. You can play the game now and it was launched on Mainnet on June 30, 2025. Valhalla is developed by FLOKI. Users can learn more at About Floki Floki is the people's cryptocurrency and utility token of the Floki Ecosystem. Floki aims to become the world's most known and most used cryptocurrency and intends to achieve this ambitious goal through a focus on utility, philanthropy, community, and marketing. Floki currently has 550,000+ holders and a strong brand recognized by billions of people worldwide due to its strategic marketing partnerships. Contact Floki

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