Rezension
"This is an extremely useful and intelligent study, one that helps us to see the linguistic 'strangeness' of these contemporary novels as something entirely motivated and, if you will, 'logically illogical' and, 'coherently incoherent'. These are all important writers of important works, and Cynthia Simmons's critical optic provides the best means thus far for viewing the Aksyonov-Erofeev-Limonov-Sokolov constellation as part of a single, richly evolving process. What was once post-soviet culture 'avant la lettre' has now become post-Soviet culture 'tout court." (David M. Bethea, University of Wisconsin)
"Professor Simmons's study focuses on a quartet of major novels that all appeared in the late 70's: Aksyonov's 'The Burn', Erofeev's 'Moscow-Petushki', Limonov's 'It's Me, Eddie', and Sasha Sokolov's 'School for Fools'. These 'aberrant' novels are analysed via a series of novel interpretive frameworks drawn from a remarkable range of sources, including Halliday's discourse analysis, Bakhtin's theories of culture, Freudian and Jungian psychology, recent sociological and anthropological theory, semiotics and deconstruction. Dr. Simmons offers a new basis for the definition of a liminal generation of Russian writers." (D. Barton Johnson, University of California at Santa Barbara)
"Professor Simmons has produced an unusual book the like of which we shall probably not see for quite some time. It is a pathfinding work and deserves to be read by all with...an interest in the development of contemporary Russian prose." (Arnold McMillin, The Slavonic Review)
"Die vorliegende Untersuchung zeichnet sich durch methodologische Flexibilität aus, die mit Hilfe von strukturalistischen Verfahren und poststrukturalistischen Eingriffen in die Textgefüge ein extrem schwieriges Terrain russischer Erzählliteratur auslotet." (Wolfgang Schlott, Osteuropa)
"I would recommend 'Their Fathers' Voice' to anyone seriously concerned with the writings of Aksenov, Erofeev, Limonov and Sokolov." (Daniel Rancour-Laferriere, The Slavonic and East European Journal)