Emil Draitser dreamed of becoming a writer. Born to a working-class
Jewish family in the USSR on the eve of World War II, he came of age
during the Brezhnev era, often considered the nadir of Soviet culture.
Bored with an engineering job, he found refuge in writing, attracting
the attention of a Moscow editor who encouraged him to try his hand at
satire. He spent the next decade contributing to Crocodile, the major
Party-sponsored magazine known for its sharp-tongued essays and caustic
cartoons. After he got in trouble for criticizing an important Soviet
official, he began weighing the heavy decision of whether to emigrate.
In this captivating memoir, Draitser explores what it means to be a
satirist in a country lacking freedom of expression. His experience
provides a window into the lives of a generation of artists who were
allowed to poke fun and make readers laugh, as long as they toed a
narrow, state-approved line. In the Jaws of the Crocodile also
includes several of Draitser's wry pieces translated into English for
the first time.