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Finally Catching Up On Some Russian Lit

Posted on 6/19/19 at 3:15 pm
Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
63222 posts
Posted on 6/19/19 at 3:15 pm
Read Pushkin's "The Queen of Spades" and "The Fatalist" from Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time for the first time. So good.

Planning to re-read Gogol's "The Overcoat" tonight.

Any favorite Russian authors or works?
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
89486 posts
Posted on 6/19/19 at 9:44 pm to
Damn, there was a Dostoevsky thread here just the other day.

I'm partial to Dostoevsky, but Gogol and Pushkin are up there, too, for me.
This post was edited on 6/19/19 at 9:45 pm
Posted by Azazello
Member since Sep 2011
3182 posts
Posted on 6/19/19 at 9:47 pm to
One of my all-time favorite books is The Master and Margarita. Read that one asap.

Bulgakov is such a good writer.
Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
63222 posts
Posted on 6/19/19 at 10:30 pm to
quote:

I'm partial to Dostoevsky


Cool. This anthology I'm reading has Dostoyevsky's short story "Bobok" in it. I'll share my thoughts after reading.
Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
63222 posts
Posted on 6/19/19 at 10:31 pm to
quote:

Bulgakov is such a good writer.


Thanks for the suggestions. Similarly, my current anthology has Bulgakov's "The Embroidered Tower." I'll let you know my thoughts.
Posted by DLSWVA
SW Virginia via Baton Rouge
Member since Nov 2012
780 posts
Posted on 6/20/19 at 9:15 am to
I remember enjoying Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich as an undergrad.
Posted by LSURussian
Member since Feb 2005
126962 posts
Posted on 6/20/19 at 12:13 pm to
quote:

Read Pushkin's "The Queen of Spades"


Factoid:

I learned while working in Russia that Pushkin, considered to be the Shakespeare of Russian language and literature, spoke mostly French as a child because he was of Russian nobility who thought that speaking French was more "civilized" and only peasants and serfs should speak Russian.

In fact, Pushkin learned the Russian language from the servants in his parents household including his nanny while growing up in St. Petersburg.

I now return you to your regularly scheduled book thread.....
Posted by Htowntiger90
Houston
Member since Dec 2018
939 posts
Posted on 6/20/19 at 3:49 pm to
quote:

One of my all-time favorite books is The Master and Margarita. Read that one asap.


I've heard this is a good book, from a Russian girl I talked to on Match I need to check it out.

I enjoyed Dead Souls on audio. I haven't really read Dostoevsky yet. I keep thinking I'll save Crime & Punishment for a long flight to Europe, but I need to just jump into it. Is he as bad a writer as Hemingway said?
Posted by beachdude
FL
Member since Nov 2008
5626 posts
Posted on 7/1/19 at 3:31 pm to
Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev.
Posted by Overbrook
Member since May 2013
6086 posts
Posted on 7/3/19 at 1:06 am to
Mikhail Sholokov’s “And quiet flows the Don” And “The Don Flows Home to the Sea” are excellent. They are tough reads like a lot of Russian literature, but powerful.
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