“I hereby announce an important agenda item for the Committee of the Motherless Daughters of the Communist Party.”
WORD LISTS"The Lost Year" by Katherine Marsh, Chapters 25–36Tue Oct 10 16:25:19 EDT 2023
Stuck in his New Jersey house during the Covid pandemic, thirteen-year-old Matthew helps his hundred-year-old great-grandmother organize her stuff and learns about her life as a Young Pioneer in 1930s Ukraine.
Here are links to our lists for the novel: Chapters 1–7, Chapters 8–15, Chapters 16–24, Chapters 25–36, Chapter 37–Epilogue
agenda
“I hereby announce an important agenda item for the Committee of the Motherless Daughters of the Communist Party.”
attain
Our objective is not so easily attained.
ideological
“Might I join you, Comrade, for one of your
practices? I could weigh in on the ideological content of your
selections—”
periodical
GG stopped periodically to look up at the sky or point at a neighbor’s tulips.
unfurl
New leaves were unfurling on the trees and there were
some bushes beginning to bloom with purple flowers.
sassy
“What are you doing?” she panted, pulling up in front of us.
I quickly cycled through my options—defiant, innocent, sassy— and decided to go with innocent.
exasperated
Mom looked from GG to me, let out an exasperated sigh.
privileged
But I don’t
think you understand how much she’s suffered. You’ve had such a privileged life, Mila. She’s lost everything and everyone.
bliss
It reminded me of the way some people listen to music, one sense overcome by the other. There was no danger of entering into this state of bliss
with Anna Mikhailovna’s current student, Vera, banging away.
rebuke
“I figured you were younger, but I’m just taller.”
“It’s hard to grow when you have nothing to eat.” Her rebuke stung.
blunder
I had even wondered if I should throw the game to lift
Nadiya’s spirits and make up for my blunders.
bluff
But early on, she called
several of my bluffs, and the ones I called on her were wrong.
squall
It
was a warm Friday afternoon in early May, and East New York was
a busy hive of kids and families, babies squalling from prams, the El
rattling over Pitkin Avenue.
pram
It
was a warm Friday afternoon in early May, and East New York was
a busy hive of kids and families, babies squalling from prams, the El
rattling over Pitkin Avenue.
stout
Mrs. Zelenko was at least forty and
as stout as a kulich, the round Easter cake.
callous
Mom let go of my hands, looked down at her own calloused ones.
stricken
The stricken look on her face immediately told me she
wanted to take it back, but it was too late.
wistful
I tensed, awaiting his anger, but his voice was soft, wistful almost.
sprawl
If he was sprawled on the bed, clutching his chest,
it was my fault—no matter what Pop had said.
parapet
She just leaned against the
stone parapet.
exploit
They were
capitalists, trying to exploit the poor and revive the old regime.
icon
“You believe in God?”
I was certain she did, like Dasha, who kept an icon hidden in her room.
gorge
Over my past visits, I hadn’t pushed her to talk about what had happened back in her village. Instead, we’d read Anna Mikhailovna’s fairy-tale books and gorged ourselves on Bumble Bears.
forge
She forged ahead with her story.
forage
We dug up rotten potatoes and made them into pancakes and
soup. We peeled bark off the trees and boiled it into a paste. We
foraged for mushrooms and made bread out of acorns. We caught
frogs, mice.
devour
But we quickly devoured the loaves she brought home, and she had nothing else to trade.
stupor
We were so hungry, Mila! We had no energy to play, to work, to do anything, even cry. Just lie there in a stupor and think about food.
thatch
We had no fire
wood—we were burning bits of furniture and thatch from the roof.
nostalgic
There were enough kids back in school with dental devices that made them chew all gross or who’d get food stuck in their braces. Funny
how I could even get nostalgic about the cafeteria and its orthodontic orchestra.
sprig
The massive parade down Khreschatyk, the songs promising to defend our motherland against the
enemy, the workers’ brigades holding up portraits of Papa Stalin and
Lenin, the folk dancers waving sprigs of cherry blossoms, the mili
tary trucks and soldiers on horseback, the proud, wiggly Octobrists,
and the confident Young Pioneers in their red scarfs waving at the cheering crowds.
don
On May 1, 1933, I still donned my Pioneer scarf.
strew
The beds were unmade;
papers and clothes were strewn across the floor.
conjure
I closed my eyes, squeezed them
tight, tried to conjure my teacher beside me.
aback
“You missed it!”
This took me aback. “Missed what?”
radical
“They were ignorant, backward people! They didn’t understand Lenin or the Revolution. They called me a radical, threw me out!”
weary
“These are kulaks,” Papa said, but his voice was weary as if he no longer believed his own arguments.
subside
My tears finally subsided, but not my anger—it spurred me to
resolve.
spur
My tears finally subsided, but not my anger—it spurred me to
resolve. Papa wasn’t going to stop me; I would figure out a plan.
mull
I mulled these
questions in my mind until, exhausted by the shocks of the day, I
fell into a fitful sleep.
fitful
I mulled these
questions in my mind until, exhausted by the shocks of the day, I
fell into a fitful sleep.
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