| Price:
$10.50
Paperback: 464 pages
Dimensions (in inches): 0.97 x 8.00 x 5.11
Publisher:Vintage; (June 29, 1999)
ISBN: 0375706151
|
When Pushkin first read some of
the stories in this collection, he declared himself "amazed."
"Here is real gaiety," he wrote, "honest, unconstrained,
without mincing, without primness. And in places what poetry! .
. . I still haven't recovered."
More than a century and a half later, Nikolai Gogol's stories continue
to delight readers the world over. Now a stunning new translation--
from an award-winning team of translators--presents these stories
in all their inventive, exuberant glory to English-speaking readers.
For the first time, the best of Gogol's short fiction is brought
together in a single volume: from the colorful Ukrainian tales that
led some critics to call him "the Russian Dickens" to
the Petersburg stories, with their black humor and wonderfully demented
attitude toward the powers that be. All of Gogol's most memorable
creations are here: the minor official who misplaces his nose, the
downtrodden clerk whose life is changed by the acquisition of a
splendid new overcoat, the wily madman who becomes convinced that
a dog can tell him everything he needs to know.
These fantastic, comic, utterly Russian characters have dazzled
generations of readers and had a profound influence on writers such
as Dostoevsky and Nabokov. Now they are brilliantly rendered in
the first new translation in twenty-five years--one that is destined
to become the definitive edition of Gogol's most important stories. |