Cold Moscow is a literary novel about winter not just as a season, but as a force that reshapes identity. Following a solitary narrator who relocates to Moscow at the edge of winter, the story traces five months of cold, silence, and gradual awakening. Through intimate observations of daily life, quiet relationships, and the city’s relentless climate, the novel explores endurance, belonging, and the subtle transformations that occur when comfort is stripped away. As snow gives way to thaw, the narrator discovers that survival is not about resistance, but attention. Atmospheric, reflective, and deeply human, Cold Moscow is a meditation on solitude, change, and what remains when the cold finally steps back.