When most parents consider sending their child to camp, they imagine a sunny lake a few hours from the city. In 1977, the parents of 11-year-old Kirsten Koza sent their pigtailed, sass-talking offspring on a trip to the Soviet Union — with only fifty dollars in her pocket.

Lost in Moscow tells the story of Kirsten’s summer camp hi-jinks: evading the Soviet Red Army in a foot race through and around Red Square, receiving radiation treatments for a minor case of tonsillitis, and making a gut-churning, unauthorized parachute jump — without being certain whether her parachute would open or even stay on.

Told from the point of view and in the voice of the young Kirsten, Lost in Moscow is sex, politics, religion, fashion, and finance through the eyes of an eleven-year-old. Hilarious and hair-raising, this is a highly unusual travel memoir — a story about children, but definitely not for children.

"Kirsten Koza is like Judy Blume on acid."
- CHRY Radio's Bound & Covered

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"So much fun to read, I found myself wiggling with giggles..."
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"A fun read, yes, but also for those who enjoy witnessing intelligence at work."
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"The funniest book I've ever read! Lost in Moscow is a brilliant read!"
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"The author has the uncanny ability of making the reader feel young again."
Lost in Moscow book

Lost in Moscow, by Kirsten Koza
Available now!

These are the readings Kirsten usually does for schools and at other events.

She starts the reading with an excerpt about sitting on the toilet contemplating cannibalism while telling fibs in her diary because there wouldn’t be the book “Lost in Moscow” at all without that little travel diary she was forced to write in by her mother.

The Moscow toilet was her first taste of culture shock – and the Soviet pop machine was another taste — it had a shared glass — all of Moscow drank from that glass — and it is probably why Kirsten ended up sick, in a Soviet hospital, where she was forgotten in public in plain view with a rectal thermometer sticking out of her bare bottom.

Kirsten was terrified that she wouldn’t be released from the hospital ever and she had to creatively hide her food so they’d think she was healthy and eating.

Lost in Moscow book cover by Doowah Design, courtesy of Turnstone Press.

© 2011 Kirsten Koza, all rights reserved | E-mail Kirsten