“Last House in USSR” – vibrant image of Moldova

A series of articles, questions and interviews written during about 20 years form the content of the book “Last House in the USSR”. The author, Romanian journalist Stefan Susai, said the name of the volume is the title of an article that has inspired him since childhood, Info-Prim Neo reports. The author's debut book in Chisinau was presented at the Cartier Bookshop in Centru district. Friends and colleagues of the author attended the launch. “When I was a child I walked on the bank of the Prut and looked at the Soviet Union. Unlike Grigore Vieru, I never wanted to cross the river. I looked at a little house there and wondered what a man could do on the bank of the Prut,” the journalist said. “By this book, I want to show those living over the Prut that there are great, kind and intelligent people in Moldova.” Historian Iurie Colesnic said he read the book with interest and found there moments that are close to him. He described the book as a necessary chronicle as “in several years we will read the history.” The book describes joyful and ironical events with fabulous humor, said writer Constantin Cheianu, adding that it is a live book with characters and psychologies. According to him, Bessarabia is not a very interesting issue in Romania and this is a pity as there are a lot of things to learn about it. The preface was written by Mihai-Razvan Ungureanu, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and current head of the Foreign Information Service of Romania. “The volume is a live, vibrant and, maybe paradoxically, time-unrelated image of Moldova,” he said. Stefan Susai was born in Iasi in 1971. He graduated from the Faculty of Law, but has worked as a journalist. He published reports about Moldova in “Cultural Supplement“, “Old Dilemma” and “Student Opinion“.

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