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Flags (Paperback)
Boris Poplavsky; Translated by Belinda Cooke, Richard McKane
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R488
R438
Discovery Miles 4 380
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"Flags" was the only volume of poetry published by the Russian
emigre poet Boris Poplavsky (1903-1935) during his own lifetime. A
significant Surrealist volume, it is one of the 'lost' creations of
a man who has been called the greatest of the Russian emigre poets.
Now recovered by Russian literary experts and re-edited for a new
public, Poplavsky is gaining the readership that eluded him in his
lifetime. Unusually, this book presents the complete contents of
the original volume ("Paris", 1933), rather than presenting a
Selected or some other overview, and thus opens a window onto a
fascinating and unfairly neglected figure.
Homeward from Heaven is Boris Poplavsky's masterpiece, written just
before his life was cut short by a drug overdose at the age of
thirty-two. Set in Paris and on the French Riviera, this final
novel by the literary enfant terrible of the interwar Russian
diaspora in France recounts the escapades, malaise, and love
affairs of a bohemian group of Russian expatriates. The novel's
protagonist and sometime narrator is Oleg, whose intense love for
two women leads him along a journey of spiritual transfiguration.
He follows Tania to a seaside resort, but after a passionate
dalliance she jilts him. In the cafes of Montparnasse, Oleg meets
Katia, with whom he finds physical intimacy and emotional candor,
yet is unable to banish a lingering sense of existential disquiet
and destitution. When he encounters Tania again in Paris, his quest
to comprehend the laws of spiritual and physical love begins anew,
with results that are both profound and tragic. Taken by
Poplavsky's contemporaries to be semiautobiographical, Homeward
from Heaven stands out for its uncompromising depictions of
sexuality and deprivation. Richly allusive and symbolic, the novel
mixes psychological confession, philosophical reflection, and
social critique in prose that is by turns poetic, mystical, and
erotic. It is at once a work of daring literary modernism and an
immersive meditation on the emigre condition.
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