Sergei de Vlatov was a young Russian émigré, fairly young Russian émigré, and the first I heard of him was Ben publishing him in Grand Street. He published, I think he published two pieces, one about his dog, Glasha, and another, I don't remember the other one, but eventually these pieces were collected in a book called Ours, and it was about his family, his Russian family. And, um, I really recommend it, you'd love it. I mean, maybe you'd love it, maybe you wouldn't. But he was a wonderful writer. He died young. He wrote this book, short pieces, and when I read this book, when I had been thinking about it, after I wrote the first piece about my father's mother's death, the con and death, um, and was thinking about going on, and I didn't know how to do it, and I didn't know how I could make the whole thing, everything, cohere. I read this book, and I go, yes, you don't have to make everything cohere, you can do short pieces, and these are wonderful, wonderful short pieces about a Russian family, and its emigration, um, and they're stories, and they're stories. You don't have to write a, a whole memoir from beginning to end. Break it out in stories.