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  • Published: 3 September 2019
  • ISBN: 9780241299739
  • Imprint: Penguin Classics
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 464
  • RRP: $30.00

Russian Émigré Short Stories from Bunin to Yanovsky



A landmark anthology of extraordinary Russian writers, revealing the full story of the emigré experience in their own words

Fleeing Russia amid the chaos of the Russian Revolution and subsequent civil war, many writers went on to settle in Paris, Berlin and elsewhere and forged new lives in exile. Much of their subsequent work, published in Russian-language magazines and books, is entirely unknown in the West and has only been recently discovered in Russia itself. As well as including stories by the most famous émigré writers, Vladimir Nabokov and Ivan Bunin, this collection introduces many lesser known voices: Yuri Felzen, known as the 'Russian Proust', Nadezhda Teffi, the hugely popular and funny story writer, and Georgy Ivanov, whose work of poetic prose 'The Atom Explodes' is a brilliant, haunting response to the upheaval and trauma of emigration. Exploring themes of displacement, nostalgia, loss and new beginnings, this anthology will transform the Anglophone world's understanding of Russian émigré writing in the 20th century.

  • Published: 3 September 2019
  • ISBN: 9780241299739
  • Imprint: Penguin Classics
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 464
  • RRP: $30.00

Other books in the series

Maldoror and Poems
On Sparta
Love
Annals
Military Dispatches

Praise for Russian Émigré Short Stories from Bunin to Yanovsky

Compelling ... Karetnyk's anthology transports the reader into the motley lives and imaginations of Russian émigrés in Paris, Berlin and beyond. Highly recommended reading for anyone fascinated by prerevolutionary Russian culture as preserved among the ranks of the two million-odd Whites that formed the first wave of emigration from Bolshevik Russia.

Anna Gunin, The Riveter

Ably translated ... Bryan Karetnyk has produced that most welcome artefact in this age of the floating text: an 'enhanced' paperback whose fictive stories are fully equipped with their histories. Writers' biographies, historical chronology, a list of Russian émigré venues, and well-researched footnotes serve to anchor each narrative in its own peripatetic time and space

Caryl Emerson, Times Literary Supplement

A powerful reminder of the trauma of civil war and hardships of displacement ... The stories evoke a lost world with attendant nostalgia, sorrow, fear and anger ... Rarely has the term 'unjustly neglected' rung more true

Country Life

Brilliantly translated by Bryan Karetnyk ... A truly wonderful selection

Los Angeles Review of Books Radio Hour

A brilliant, poignant anthology

Alexis Levitin, Los Angeles Review of Books

A rich anthology ... Editor and lead translator Bryan Karetnyk has done a marvellous job ... The translations maintain a high standard of literary quality and precision. Admirably equipped with biographical and explanatory notes, this anthology presents to the Anglophone reader, for the first time, a unified representation of the authors and disparate, yet interlinked cultural contexts of first-wave Russian emigration

Judges, Read Russia Prize 2018