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Discovering Russian Literature discussion

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GROUP ADMINSTRATION > Group Reading Nominations! - (May) Closed! Vote!

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message 1: by Amalie (new)

Amalie  | 650 comments Mod
Include your nominations. Make sure your book has an English translation available.


message 2: by Larry (last edited Apr 16, 2014 06:12AM) (new)

Larry Wang The Luzhin Defence by Vladimir Nabokov
Invitation to a Beheading by Vladimir Nabokov


message 3: by Lisa (new)

Lisa (lisadannatt) | 37 comments Dead Souls- Nicolay Gogol


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

Lisa wrote: "Dead Souls- Nicolay Gogol"

Lisa, I think we read read this. Make sure you nominate another.


message 5: by [deleted user] (new)

The Kreutzer Sonata by Leo Tolstoy. I'm planning to read it.


message 6: by Todd (new)

Todd | 11 comments The Suitcase. Sergei Dovlatov


message 9: by Amalie (new)

Amalie  | 650 comments Mod
Lisa wrote: "Dead Souls- Nicolay Gogol"

We read Dead Souls in 2011. I will not be including it in the poll again as there are so many books yet to be read. How about another selection?


message 10: by Lisa (new)

Lisa (lisadannatt) | 37 comments Amalie wrote: "Lisa wrote: "Dead Souls- Nicolay Gogol"

We read Dead Souls in 2011. I will not be including it in the poll again as there are so many books yet to be read. How about another selection?"


No worries, I'm going to go with whatever the group decides.


message 11: by fatima (new)

fatima larbi aissa (fatyla) | 1 comments I am a fun of russian literature specially tolstoy, dostoyevsky and gogol though i've never read to any of them, but i heurt a lot about them. i want to read their works but i can't now i'll do it in the summer because i don't have time.


message 12: by Larry (new)

Larry Warwaruk | 7 comments How about Gogol's Taras Bulba?


message 13: by Joyce (new)

Joyce Yarrow | 26 comments How about Petroleum Venus by Alexander Snegirev?

Petroleum Venus


message 14: by Anne (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments I would like that one, or Way of Muri (as above).

There's so much excellent new writing that no one seems to know about, and I wish more people did know about it, especially as a lot of writing is being translated now, although not yet nearly enough!


message 15: by Anne (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments Or The Light and the Dark by Mikhail Shishkin, tr by Andrew Bromfield.

The Light and the Dark


message 16: by Joyce (new)

Joyce Yarrow | 26 comments Anne Marie wrote: "I would like that one, or Way of Muri (as above).

There's so much excellent new writing that no one seems to know about, and I wish more people did know about it, especially as a lot of writing ..."


I agree - GLAS New Russian Writing has a wonderful catalog to choose from.


message 17: by Anne (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments They certainly do.


message 18: by Larry (new)

Larry Warwaruk | 7 comments How about Isaac Bashevis Singer?


message 19: by Ana (new)

Ana Maria | 1 comments A friend recommended White Guard by Mikhail Bulgakov. Translation by Marian Schwartz


message 20: by Larry (new)

Larry Warwaruk | 7 comments Very informative book to help understand. The area


message 21: by Amalie (new)

Amalie  | 650 comments Mod
Larry wrote: "How about Isaac Bashevis Singer?"


We read Russian and Ex USSR writers. Isn't Isaac Bashevis Singer a writer from the Iron Curtain? I might be wrong if so I'll add him to group bookshelf.


message 22: by Joyce (new)

Joyce Yarrow | 26 comments Isaac Beshevis Singer was a Polish-born Jewish-American author - marvelous writer.


message 23: by Larry (new)

Larry Warwaruk | 7 comments Aye, there's the rub! Many of his stories are set in pre-WW2 eastern Galicia which at that time was eastern Poland and is now western Ukraine which currently holds the power in Kyiv. To include him in Russian literature? That part of Europe has had, and has, an extremely intermingled population.


message 24: by Joyce (new)

Joyce Yarrow | 26 comments Larry wrote: "Aye, there's the rub! Many of his stories are set in pre-WW2 eastern Galicia which at that time was eastern Poland and is now western Ukraine which currently holds the power in Kyiv. To include him..."

I vote to include him. My last name - Yarrow - was once Yaroshevsky and my ancestors come from the area you speak of, Larry :)


message 25: by Anne (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments It's a recent translation by Amanda Love Darragh. (She's also translated many of Andrei Kurkov's books, among others!)


message 26: by Anne (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments Has the vote begun yet? If so, where do we vote? (I apologise, as I've had this problem before but I just can't remember how it works...)


message 27: by dely (last edited Apr 29, 2014 01:55AM) (new)

dely | 340 comments Anne Marie wrote: "Has the vote begun yet? If so, where do we vote? (I apologise, as I've had this problem before but I just can't remember how it works...)"

On the top right of this page, click "polls" and there you find it.

edit: ops, I have seen only now that the poll closed yesterday.


message 28: by Anne (last edited Apr 29, 2014 03:48AM) (new)

Anne Marie (anisoara) | 41 comments dely wrote: "Anne Marie wrote: "Has the vote begun yet? If so, where do we vote? (I apologise, as I've had this problem before but I just can't remember how it works...)"

On the top right of this page, click..."


Thank you for that. I missed my chance - but if I'd been on time I'd have voted for The Way of Muri.


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