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Eurydice Street: A Place in Athens (2004)

von Sofka Zinovieff

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A wonderfully fresh, funny and enquiring account of a family's move to Athens and their adaptation to a new culture.
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British-born Sofka Zinovieff travels back to Athens, Greece with her Greek husband and children. In Eurydice Street she recounts the first year of her efforts to "become" Greek. Embracing culture, politics and customs, Zinovieff vividly describes the swirling life around her. Because of her unbridled enthusiasm, friends comment she is more Greek than her husband. Eurydice Street is an interesting blend of history, travelogue, memoir, and political commentary on all things Athens. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Aug 27, 2018 |
This story was a great introduction to our holiday in Greece. It explained many of the things we saw as we drove around Greece and gave us a useful background in to the Greek way of life. Sofia Zinovieff is honest about the shortcomings of life in Greece but also charmed by the country and as a non-native living there she is able to give a visitors perspective on this beautiful country. Set in Athens, it is clear that this is another world to northern Greece but it is still useful background. She writes well with humour and generosity. ( )
1 abstimmen CarolKub | May 15, 2017 |
Eurydice Street is British-born journalist Zinovieff's memoir of her move to Athens with her Greek husband and their two children. The title comes from the name of their street in the suburb of Vouliagmeni. She'd trained as an anthropologist and done graduate work in Greece, so she spoke Greek and had ideas of becoming a "real" Greek, going so far as trying to become a citizen. However, unlike her husband, who quickly readjusts to life in Greece after around 20 years away, and her two children who are young enough to soak up the culture like little sponges, things don't quite come as easily for Sofka.

But it's the small joys and idiosyncrasies of Greek life that capture you. Her prose is gorgeous, and you find yourself effortlessly picking up Greek history and culture without any mental effort on your part. The book was written before the economic crisis, but you definitely get the picture that it is a society on the edge of change. She meets a politician who views doing favors as a gift he can give and gets told that her citizenship will take two years unless she knows someone. The Olympics are gearing up, and the old ways are falling apart, but still the family manages to stay together and even flourish.

Highly recommended for anyone with an interest in modern Greece, memoirs, or good prose. ( )
  inge87 | Oct 12, 2013 |
I read this while in Athens, and enjoyed it quite a bit. I see the one other reviewer here compared it unfavorably to Dinner With Persephone: I was going to write the opposite. I found Eurydice Street better-written and more interesting, whereas I had to skim much of Dinner. I'd recommend this book for anyone wanting an insider's perspective on Greece and Athens. ( )
  bobbieharv | Oct 16, 2009 |
There's nothing really wrong with this memoir of the author's first year of living in Athens with her Greek husband and two children. It is well written and deals with all the pecularities of Greece and its inhabitants that are so striking to those who have travelled there. The only thing is: this has been done so much better by Patricia Storace in her magnificent Dinner with Persephone. Storace's prose and her perspicacity are clearly superior, and if you wish to read a single book on contemporary Greece, I would say, go for Storace. ( )
  CVandenEynde | Apr 19, 2009 |
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A wonderfully fresh, funny and enquiring account of a family's move to Athens and their adaptation to a new culture.

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