To Go On Living


Author
Narine Abgaryan

Format
Short stories, 2014
280 pp

Genre
Drama, war-time drama
Title
To Go On Living

Aesthetics
Heart-rending, piercing, tearful, moving, hopeful

References
Paisan, Roberto Rossellini, 1964
The Cranes Are Flying, Mikhail Kalatozov, 1957
L’Amore, Roberto Rossellini and Federico Fellini, 1948

Sales points
70,000 copies sold
English-language edition due spring 2025
Pitch
In the wake of unspeakable tragedy, survivors grapple with the simplest yet hardest question: how to find love, hope, and a future while holding onto the memories of those lost to war.

Synopsis
Set in the picturesque mountain village of Berd, we follow the interconnected lives of its inhabitants, seemingly unremarkable villagers who go on about their lives, tending to their daily tasks, engaging in their quotidian squabbles, and celebrating small joys amid a beautiful local landscape. Yet their seemingly unremarkable existence in a setting imbued with a deliberate sense of being suspended in time and space belies an unspeakable tragedy: every character must contend with the unbearable burden of loss that they have suffered during the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the early 1990s.
The war itself appears only in small and fragmented flashbacks, as the author focuses on the war’s aftermath, portraying the different ways in which the survivors work, as individuals and as a community, to find a way forward. For some, the toll is a psychological one, as the opening vignette introduces the reader to Zanazan, a beautiful young woman who has lost her unborn child, her husband, and her ability to speak to enemy shelling, and who now lives in the care of her elderly mother-in-law. The middle-aged Metaksia visits her stepson’s grave and chats with him as if they were sitting across from each other at a dinner table. Agnessa, whose ill-fated desire to keep her daughter warm in a bomb shelter has cost her not only her own limbs but also the life of her child finds love and a chance at redemption with a new family. Lusine, who barely recalls her mother, abducted and brutally murdered by the enemy, receives, as an engagement present, the last surviving rug woven by her mother. Anichka, whose entire family has been brutally murdered, forges a platonic relationship with a widower whose son has been left incapacitated by yet another act of senseless violence.
Each character has lived through unimaginable loss, but their sadness is described as cathartic, engendering hope where all hope must be lost. There are thirty interconnected short stories, and thirty dramas to follow – a true hymn to the resilience of the human spirit and its ability to soar above.
About the author
Born in 1971 in Berd, Armenia, Narine Abgaryan is the internationally bestselling author of a dozen of books, with combined sales of over 1,5 million copies.
The author’s powerful and moving parable Three Apples Fell From the Sky was translated into 30 languages and became a long seller throughout Europe.
Since 2022 Narine Abgaryan has moved to her native Armenia, sharing her time between Armenia and Germany.