How The Two Ivans Quarrelled
An 1841 painting of Russian author Nikolai Gogol. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis Sophia Martelli Sunday 23 October 2011 00.05 BST Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Shares 5 Comments 0 Save for later Pre-revolutionary Russian literature might not resound with comedy (War and Peace, Crime and Punishment, Eugene Onegin, anyone?) but this collection of "Russian comic stories" is not an oxymoron. Any story that starts: "Once upon a time there were two generals. They were both nitwits, and so, in no time at all, by a wave of some magic wand, they found themselves on a desert island," as Mikhail Saltykov's "Two Generals" does, gets this reviewer's vote for irreverence, not to mention surreal scene-setting.
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How The Two Ivans Quarrelled
An 1841 painting of Russian author Nikolai Gogol. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis Sophia Martelli Sunday 23 October 2011 00.05 BST Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Shares 5 Comments 0 Save for later Pre-revolutionary Russian literature might not resound with comedy (War and Peace, Crime and Punishment, Eugene Onegin, anyone?) but this collection of "Russian comic stories" is not an oxymoron. Any story that starts: "Once upon a time there were two generals. They were both nitwits, and so, in no time at all, by a wave of some magic wand, they found themselves on a desert island," as Mikhail Saltykov's "Two Generals" does, gets this reviewer's vote for irreverence, not to mention surreal scene-setting.
5.38 In Stock
How The Two Ivans Quarrelled

How The Two Ivans Quarrelled

by Nikolai Gogol
How The Two Ivans Quarrelled

How The Two Ivans Quarrelled

by Nikolai Gogol

Paperback

$5.38 
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Overview

An 1841 painting of Russian author Nikolai Gogol. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis Sophia Martelli Sunday 23 October 2011 00.05 BST Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Shares 5 Comments 0 Save for later Pre-revolutionary Russian literature might not resound with comedy (War and Peace, Crime and Punishment, Eugene Onegin, anyone?) but this collection of "Russian comic stories" is not an oxymoron. Any story that starts: "Once upon a time there were two generals. They were both nitwits, and so, in no time at all, by a wave of some magic wand, they found themselves on a desert island," as Mikhail Saltykov's "Two Generals" does, gets this reviewer's vote for irreverence, not to mention surreal scene-setting.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781535328203
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 07/16/2016
Pages: 28
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.07(d)

About the Author

About The Author

Novelist, dramatist, and satirist Nikolai Gogol (1809-1852) was a Russian writer of Ukrainian ancestry whose works deeply influenced later Russian literature through powerful depictions of a society dominated by petty bureaucracy and base corruption. Gogol’s best-known short stories — "The Nose" and "The Overcoat" — display strains of Surrealism and the grotesque, while his greatest novel, Dead Souls, is one of the founding books of Russian realism.

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