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Lost Believers

A Novel

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About The Book

“A beautiful, mournful novel about faith gravely tempered by grief and the brutal iron of modernity bringing the greatest of losses. Zhorov’s voice is fresh and appealing.” —Joy Williams, author of The Visiting Privilege and Harrow

A rich, immersive debut novel, inspired by true events, about a meeting between two women in 1970s Soviet Russia—a deeply religious homesteader living in isolation with her family on the Siberian taiga and an ambitious scientist—that irrevocably alters the course of both of their lives.

Galina, a promising young geologist from Moscow, is falling in love with her pilot, Snow Crane, on an expedition for minerals in Siberia. As their helicopter hovers over what should be a stretch of uninhabited forest, they see a small hut and a garden—and, the following day, when they hike from their field camp to the hut, they find a family.

Agafia was born in Siberia into a family of Old Believers, a small sect of Christians who rejected the reforms that shaped the modern Russian Orthodox church. Her parents, fleeing religious persecution four decades earlier, journeyed deep into the snowy wilderness, eventually building a home far away from the dangerous and sinful world. Galina and Snow Crane are the first people she has ever met outside of her immediate household. As the two women develop a friendship, each becomes conflicted about futures that once seemed certain and find themselves straining against their past: Galina can’t shake the confines of her Soviet upbringing, and Agafia’s focus drifts from her faith to the beauty of the relentlessly harsh taiga. Underneath it all, Galina begins to see how her work opening mines threatens both Agafia and her home, and mirrors the exploitation of the natural world happening across the Soviet Union.

A vivid and illuminating novel about faith, fate, and freedom against the backdrop of 1970s Soviet life, Lost Believers is an unforgettable journey.

Reading Group Guide

This reading group guide for Lost Believers includes an introduction, discussion questions, and ideas for enhancing your book club. The suggested questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book.

Introduction

Set in Soviet Russia in the 1970s, Lost Believers chronicles a chance encounter between two young women that forever alters the course of their lives. Galina is an ambitious young geologist with an influential father, leading a state scouting mission for iron deposits in a remote stretch of Siberian wilderness. Agafia is the youngest daughter of a family of Old Believers, a persecuted sect of Christians, who have been living in total isolation for decades. Galina and her pilot, Snow Crane, are the first people outside of her family Agafia has ever met. The growing friendship between the two women begins to challenge the beliefs and futures they had previously thought unshakable. As Agafia learns more about the world beyond her homestead and suffers several grievous losses, Galina begins to question her own role in the construction of a mine that threatens to displace her new friend’s family. Against the backdrop of the icy taiga and Soviet-era Moscow, this powerful novel explores faith and politics, family and friendship, and the relentless march of “progress” as it threatens the natural world.

Topics and Questions for Discussion

1. “You know, first contact is never good for the contacted,” Snow Crane tells Galina after they spot the Kols’s homestead from the helicopter (page 19). Discuss the first meeting between the family and the geologists. If you were the Kols, what would you have been feeling? How do you think the experience was different for Hugo, Agafia, and her older siblings?

2. Agafia is often visited by the ghost of Peter the Great (1672–1725), the Russian tsar who, though a great statesman and reformer, furthered persecution of the Old Believers. Why do you think her imaginary friend took this form? What did his presence do to, and for, Agafia?

3. The Kols’s faith is rooted in preservation of the past; the “god [Galina] was taught to love,” however, “was progress” (82). How does this tension between old and new ways of doing things play out in the story? In what ways are Galina’s political allegiances a kind of faith?

4. When Galina begins studying geology, she thinks of it as “wizardry and divination” (10), and later, after introducing herself as a geologist, someone calls her “a mystic” (244). Why does Galina’s relationship with the land take on a spiritual quality? How does nonreligious spirituality manifest in the novel for other characters?

5. Galina and Snow Crane had vastly different experiences with the Soviet state when they were growing up. How do these differences affect their lives, their relationship, and ultimately their futures?

6. Of her father, Galina says, “He’d never pass as a believable villain in a book . . . because he was too flat” (140). What did you think of his character and the actions he took to steer the events of the novel?

7. Discuss Agafia’s awakening to the outside world over the course of the novel. How does meeting the geologists set off a chain of events that alters the course of her life? What moments have the biggest impact on her internal journey and understanding of her place in the world?

8. Agafia’s brother Dima had confided in her his desire to start a family and build a life beyond their homestead. Why do you think he never did? When she herself is finally given the opportunity to leave, why do you think Agafia makes the decision she does?

9. What role does Agafia play in Galina’s awakening to the impact that her job for the state might have on the environment? Do you recall a moment of awakening in your own life about the global environmental crisis? What environmental issues today remind you of the ones Galina is forced to contend with in the novel?

10. “Do something real,” David implores Galina in a letter. “What are we destroying in order to build? Look closely. You can do more. I can too” (219). What did you think of the actions Galina ultimately takes? Could she have done more?

11. Discuss the role of loss and absence in the story. How do characters like the Kols, Snow Crane, Pavel, and Marat handle their grief over those they have lost?

12. If Galina and Agafia had never crossed paths, how might their futures have turned out differently? Do you think they would have been happier if they had remained ignorant of what they learned from each other?

13. Discuss the ending of the book. What do you imagine becomes of each of the characters after the final page?

14. What do you think is the meaning of the title Lost Believers?

Enhance Your Book Club

1. Watch a 2013 documentary from Vice about the true story that served as the inspiration for Lost Believers, in which the producers visit the real-life Agafia in the taiga: https://youtu.be/tt2AYafET68

2. Read this article from UCLA’s National Heritage Language Resource Center to learn more about Old Believers and the lives of those who immigrated to the United States: https://nhlrc.ucla.edu/nhlrc/article/166943

3. Research the geology of the region where you live. Do you find yourself relating to Galina and her fascination with geology and the mysterious properties of the earth and minerals?

About The Author

Photograph by Sam Brown
Irina Zhorov

Irina Zhorov was born in Uzbekistan, in the Soviet Union, and moved to Philadelphia on the eve of its dissolution. After failing to make use of a geology degree, she received an MFA from the University of Wyoming. She’s worked as a journalist for more than a decade, reporting primarily on environmental issues.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Scribner (August 1, 2023)
  • Length: 320 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668011553

Raves and Reviews

"Zhorov deftly explores the landscape of the two women's lives and the choices they must make as their worlds converge, mapping the forces of faith and fate, progress and preservation onto the backdrop of 1970s Soviet life."
—Scientific American

"A beautiful, mournful novel about faith gravely tempered by grief and the brutal iron of modernity bringing the greatest of losses. Zhorov's voice is fresh and appealing."
—Joy Williams, author of The Visiting Privilege and Harrow

Lost Believers reads like a journey into the heart of a dark Siberian fairytale—Irina Zhorov is a guide I trusted and believed in completely, and admired for the compassion she has for her characters, and for the earth itself.”
—Carys Davies, author of West and The Mission House

“This hard, beautiful, highly moving novel seems carved straight out of the Siberian landscape it so vividly describes. Whether she is evoking the mountains and woods of the legendary taiga or Moscow in the 1970s, Zhorov writes with vision and clarity. Galina and Agafia and the whole lost world they inhabit come wonderfully alive.”
—Laird Hunt, author of Zorrie and This Wide Terraqueous World

“Like the wilds of Siberia—wondrous, ruthless, and full of surprises. A novel about survival, about carving out space for joy in the face of brutality, about staying and about leaving, about choosing between freedom and the people you love.”
—Ash Davidson, author of Damnation Spring

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