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Between Dog and Wolf (Paperback)
Sasha Sokolov; Translated by Alexander Boguslawski
bundle available
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R397
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
Save R57 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sasha Sokolov is one of few writers to have been praised by
Vladimir Nabokov, who called his first novel, A School for Fools,
"an enchanting, tragic, and touching book." Sokolov's second novel,
Between Dog and Wolf, written in 1980, has long intimidated
translators because of its complex puns, rhymes, and neologisms.
Language rather than plot motivates the story-the novel is often
compared to James Joyce's Finnegans Wake-and time, characters, and
death all prove unstable. The one constant is the Russian
landscape, where the Volga is a more-crossable River Styx,
especially when it freezes in winter. Sokolov's fiction has hugely
influenced contemporary Russian writers. Now, thanks to Alexander
Boguslawski's bold and superb translation, English readers can
access what many consider to be his best work.
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A School For Fools (Paperback, Main)
Sasha Sokolov; Translated by Alexander Boguslawski
bundle available
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R495
R400
Discovery Miles 4 000
Save R95 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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By turns lyrical and philosophical, witty and baffling, "A School
for Fools" confounds all expectations of the novel. Here we find
not one reliable narrator but two "unreliable" narrators: the young
man who is a student at the "school for fools" and his double. What
begins as a reverie (with frequent interruptions) comes to seem a
sort of fairy-tale quest not for gold or marriage but for
self-knowledge. The currents of consciousness running through the
novel are passionate and profound. Memories of childhood summers at
the dacha are contemporaneous with the present, the dead are alive,
and the beloved is present in the wind. Here is a tale either of
madness or of the life of the imagination, in conversation with
reason, straining at the limits of language; in the words of
Vladimir Nabokov, "an enchanting, tragic, and touching work." Sasha
Sokolov was born in 1943 in Canada, the son of a high-ranking
Soviet diplomat. Sokolov studied journalism at Moscow State
University and attempted to escape from the USSR, for which he was
imprisoned. In 1975, he was allowed to leave the country following
an international human rights scandal. The manuscript of "A School
for Fools," his first novel, was smuggled out of the Soviet Union
that same year, and published to great acclaim in the west. "A
School for Fools" has been translated into over twenty languages.
Sokolov is the recipient of the prestigious Andrei Bely Prize in
1981, and of the Pushkin Prize for Literature in 1996. He is also
the author of novels "Astrophobia" and "Between Dog and Wolf," and
of a book of essays "In the House of the Hanged."
Sasha Sokolov is one of few writers to have been praised by
Vladimir Nabokov, who called his first novel, A School for Fools,
"an enchanting, tragic, and touching book." Sokolov's second novel,
Between Dog and Wolf, written in 1980, has long intimidated
translators because of its complex puns, rhymes, and neologisms.
Language rather than plot motivates the story-the novel is often
compared to James Joyce's Finnegans Wake-and time, characters, and
death all prove unstable. The one constant is the Russian
landscape, where the Volga is a more-crossable River Styx,
especially when it freezes in winter. Sokolov's fiction has hugely
influenced contemporary Russian writers. Now, thanks to Alexander
Boguslawski's bold and superb translation, English readers can
access what many consider to be his best work.
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