Book Resume
for The Genius Under the Table: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain by Eugene Yelchin
Professional book information and credentials for The Genius Under the Table.
8 Professional Reviews (5 Starred)
6 Book Awards
Selected for 8 State/Province Lists
See full Book Resume
on TeachingBooks
Eugene Yelchin’s funny, tender memoir recounts aspects of his childhood and ...read more
- School Library Journal:
- Grades 5 and up
- Kirkus:
- Ages 10 and up
- Publisher's Weekly:
- Ages 9 - 12
- Booklist:
- Grades 5 - 8
- TeachingBooks:*
- Grades 3-12
- Word Count:
- 22,210
- Lexile Level:
- 760L
- ATOS Reading Level:
- 4.9
- Cultural Experience:
- Jewish
- Genre:
- Biography
- Nonfiction
- Year Published:
- 2021
7 Subject Headings
The following 7 subject headings were determined by the U.S. Library of Congress and the Book Industry Study Group (BISAC) to reveal themes from the content of this book (The Genius Under the Table).
8 Full Professional Reviews (5 Starred)
The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.
Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Eugene Yelchin’s funny, tender memoir recounts aspects of his childhood and young adulthood in Leningrad during the Cold War. Young Yevgeny’s father is a lover of poetry, his mother a lover of beauty and dance who fears it’s only a matter of time before the incomparable Baryshnikov makes his escape to the West. Their Jewish family of five, including his older brother and his grandmother, live in a single room, where Yevgeny sleeps on a cot under the table, secretly stealing his father’s pencil to draw every night. His brother is an ice skater, while their mother hopes that Yevgeny might succeed at ballet—something she once dreamed of doing herself. To please her he agrees to try, but Yevgeny knows he has no gift for dance. He also knows his parents worry—what will he do without a talent? The day his father discovers Yevgeny’s many drawings on the underside of the table, he proclaims his son a genius. Soon Yevgeny’s taking lessons from an artist, but lessons in life are all around him in this observant, witty, moving account. Jaunty black-and-white drawings are found throughout a narrative in which the measure of life as a Soviet Citizen is equal parts absurdity and poignancy. (Age 9 and older)
CCBC Choices 2022 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2022. Used with permission.
From School Library Journal
Starred review from October 1, 2021
Gr 5 Up-Yelchin has created an unforgettable portrayal of one family's experiences living in the Soviet Union during the Cold War in his ingenious memoir. Using expressive drawings, Yelchin enhances his story of growing up in Leningrad. Yevgeny, his brother Victor, father, mother, and grandmother all share one room in a communal apartment. Each figure is shown to be beautifully human, flaws and all. Victor is a wonderful ice skater who began by skating behind trucks in traffic; the father is a stern Communist who loves Russian poets, such as Osip Mandelstam; the mother works for the Vaganova Ballet School and adores Mikhail Baryshnikov; and the grandmother is keeping a secret about their grandfather. Every evening, all the furniture in their one room living space has to be moved to convert it into their bedroom. Yevgeny sleeps under the dining room table, where he draws on the underside of the table each night with a pencil he has taken from his father. When his drawings are discovered, Yevgeny earns the nickname of "The Genius Under the Table" from his family and begins to study drawing. With an engaging and likable subject, Newbery Honor author Yelchin offers a poignant look at growing up during Cold War-era Soviet Union that will fascinate readers. VERDICT Recommended for those who love captivating memoirs mixed with humor.-Susan Catlett, Green Run H.S., Virginia Beach
Copyright 2021 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
From Kirkus
Starred review from September 15, 2021
Yelchin delivers a darkly humorous slice-of-life account of growing up in the Soviet Union. Living with his mother, father, brother, and grandmother in a tiny room inside a communal apartment in Leningrad, young Yevgeny does not have much privacy. He sleeps underneath the family table, where he spends his nights drawing in secret on the underside of the table. He draws to try to make sense of the confusing world around him, where neighbors spy on one another, everyone seems to be keeping secrets, and only the most remarkable, talented citizens are allowed luxuries like private apartments, cars, and the opportunity to travel outside the country. Yevgeny's older brother is a talented figure skater, and his parents are desperate to uncover a latent talent in him so that he can make a good life for himself, yet he unwittingly foils their well-meaning attempts in several comical incidents. Furthermore, the family's Jewish identity puts them at a disadvantage in a country where antisemitism regularly rears its ugly head. Yelchin's line drawings, re-created from his childhood sketches under the table, punctuate his story with visual humor and pathos. The vivid dialogue exchanged among his elders provides comic relief to many of the stark situations depicted as Yevgeny tries to hang onto hope amid the chaos and uses what considerable artistic talent he certainly possesses to try to envision a better future for himself and his family. Humorous, heartbreaking, and ultimately hopeful. (Memoir. 10-adult)
COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
From Horn Book
Starred review from September 1, 2021
When it becomes clear that unathletic Yevgeny is not going to follow in the footsteps of his figure-skating-whiz older brother Victor, their mother hopes -- against all evidence -- that he might make it in the world of the Soviet Union's other big artistic export, ballet, where she herself works and even has the acquaintance of the rising star Mikhail Baryshnikov. But Yevgeny's genius lies elsewhere, literally under the family's noses, if they only thought to look beneath the dining table where Yevgeny sleeps (and draws) each night. (It's a one-room apartment in 1960s Leningrad, housing Yevgeny, his brother and parents, and his grandmother, who gets some of the best lines in this book.) We now know Yevgeny as Newbery Honor-winning author and illustrator Eugene Yelchin (Breaking Stalin's Nose, rev. 9/11), and this memoir of his adolescence is a forthright, darkly humorous, and indelible portrait of an artist emerging. Family crowding and dynamics aside, the obstacles in Yevgeny's life are large (Soviet authoritarianism and antisemitism chief among them), but always grounded in the particulars of this kid's story: "Don't cry, boy," says a neighbor to an upset Yevgeny. "Have a cookie. You yids like sweets." As you can see from the excerpt on pages 21-28 of this issue, Yelchin, wonderfully, allows his text and pictures to interrupt each other with glee, reminding us how life begets art. It certainly does here. Roger Sutton
(Copyright 2021 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
From Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from August 30, 2021
In this frank, engaging memoir, Yelchin (Spy Runner) recounts his childhood in the U.S.S.R. as his boyhood self, Yevgeny, perceives and ponders it. Living in one room of a communal apartment with his grandmother, parents, and figure-skating champion older brother-and a government spy eavesdropping on them next door-Yevgeny searches for the talent that will make him "free" like the famous ballet dancers and ice skaters who have private apartments and travel abroad. At night, sleeping on a cot under the dining table, he tries to make sense of life by drawing on the underside of the table with a pencil stolen from his father. Yelchin humorously and sympathetically depicts his Jewish family-his outspoken mother who worships Mikhail Baryshnikov, his "tight-lipped communist" father with a passion for Russian poetry-as well as his tender sibling relationship. The penetrating pencil-textured drawings that accompany Yelchin's perceptive text ("No chewing gum was sold in our country... We barely had stuff to eat, let alone stuff to chew") are, he writes, rooted in memories of those early table sketches, and complement young
Yevgeny's earnest, often baffled, voice. At once comical and disquieting, the book is an illuminating introduction to a young life in the former Soviet Union. Ages 9—12. (Oct.)â—
From Horn Book
July 1, 2021
When it becomes clear that unathletic Yevgeny is not going to follow in the footsteps of his figure-skating-whiz older brother Victor, their mother hopes -- against all evidence -- that he might make it in the world of the Soviet Union's other big artistic export, ballet, where she herself works and even has the acquaintance of the rising star Mikhail Baryshnikov. But Yevgeny's genius lies elsewhere, literally under the family's noses, if they only thought to look beneath the dining table where Yevgeny sleeps (and draws) each night. (It's a one-room apartment in 1960s Leningrad, housing Yevgeny, his brother and parents, and his grandmother, who gets some of the best lines in this book.) We now know Yevgeny as Newbery Honor-winning author and illustrator Eugene Yelchin (Breaking Stalin's Nose, rev. 9/11), and this memoir of his adolescence is a forthright, darkly humorous, and indelible portrait of an artist emerging. Family crowding and dynamics aside, the obstacles in Yevgeny's life are large (Soviet authoritarianism and antisemitism chief among them), but always grounded in the particulars of this kid's story: "Don't cry, boy," says a neighbor to an upset Yevgeny. "Have a cookie. You yids like sweets." As you can see from the excerpt on pages 21-28 of this issue, Yelchin, wonderfully, allows his text and pictures to interrupt each other with glee, reminding us how life begets art. It certainly does here.
(Copyright 2021 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
From Booklist
Starred review from June 1, 2021
Grades 5-8 *Starred Review* This warm and wonderfully illustrated autobiography comes from the author of Newbery Honor Book Breaking Stalin's Nose (2011). Yelchin describes his 1960s Leningrad childhood in the former Soviet Union, where his entire family crowds into a one-room apartment right next to the resident KGB informer. Mom is hopelessly in love with Misha Baryshnikov. Dad weeps over his favorite Russian poets. Big brother Victor is a champion figure skater. And little Yevgeny? His talents seem . . . elusive. Yevgeny is frustrated not only because of his cloudy future but also because of the questions he isn't allowed to ask, let alone get answered: ""How heavy is the Iron Curtain?"" ""What does it mean when people 'defecate' and seek asylum?"" ""Why is Grandpa cut out of all our family photos?"" Yevgeny finds solace in drawing on his secret canvas--the underside of Grandma's table. Luckily, when his pictures are discovered, he is declared a genius and starts art lessons. The self-effacing narrative seamlessly blends in Cold War history, Soviet politics, and loving family interchanges, and Yelchin's sly illustrations appear on almost every page. There's not a lot of material about this time period, and this humorous, informative, and engaging memoir will keep readers entertained.
COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
From AudioFile Magazine
Author and narrator Eugene Yelchin dazzles with his memoir of growing up in the USSR during the Cold War. Listeners meet Eugene (Yevgeny), his parents, brother, and grandmother, who live in a tiny apartment and share a kitchen and bathroom with many others. Yelchin delivers his mother's bellowing voice, his grandma's Jewish witticisms, and young Yevgeny's own apparent lack of talents likely to ensure a comfortable future, along with his innocence and humor. Atmospheric conversations reveal small personal pleasures, including his mother's love of ballet and Mikhail Baryshnikov; his Communist dad's sentimental poetry; and Yevgeny's own pictures, which he draws under the dining table. Yevgeny grows up fast when the family faces anti-Jewish sentiment. However, his artistic talent suggests a hopeful future in this bittersweet listen. S.G.B. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
6 Book Awards & Distinctions
The Genius Under the Table was recognized by committees of professional librarians and educators for the following book awards and distinctions.
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ALSC Notable Children's Books, 1995-2024, Commended, 2022
CCBC Choices, Selection, 2022
Golden Kite Awards, 1974-2024, Illustration for Older Readers Honor, 2022
Sydney Taylor Book Award, 2001-2025, Honor, 2022
Horn Book Fanfare, 2001-2024, Selection, 2021
SLJ Best Books of the Year, 2010 - 2024, Selection, 2021
8 Selections for State & Provincial Recommended Reading Lists
The Genius Under the Table was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.
United States Lists (8)
California
- CDE Recommended List 2022
- CDE Recommended List 2022, Grades 3-5
District of Columbia
- Capitol Choices, 2022, Ages 10-14
Nevada
- Nevada Reading Week 2023 Book List, Grades 6-8
Pennsylvania
- Best of 2021, Grades K-12
Tennessee
- Volunteer State Book Awards, 2022-2023 -- Middle School Division, Grades 6-8
Texas
- Texas Topaz Nonfiction Reading List, 2023
Vermont
- Vermont Golden Dome Book Award, 2022-2023, Grades 4-8
Primary Source Statement on Creating The Genius Under the Table
Eugene Yelchin on creating The Genius Under the Table:
This primary source recording with Eugene Yelchin was created to provide readers insights directly from the book's creator into the backstory and making of this book.
Listen to this recording on TeachingBooks
Citation: Yelchin, Eugene. "Meet-the-Author Recording | The Genius Under the Table." TeachingBooks, https://library.teachingbooks.net/bookResume/t/77808. Accessed 30 January, 2025.
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This Book Resume for The Genius Under the Table is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.
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Retrieved from TeachingBooks on January 29, 2025. © 2001-2025 TeachingBooks.net, LLC. All rights reserved by rights holders.