Notes on the Cuff & Other StoriesThe stories collected here represent a sampling of the prose that first established Bulgakov as a major figure in the literary renaissance of Moscow in the 1920s, long before he became known as an influential playwright and novelist. The centerpiece of this collection is the long story "Notes on the Cuff", a comically autobiographical account of how the tenacious young writer managed to begin his literary career despite famine, typhus, civil war, the wrong political affiliation, and the Byzantine Moscow bureaucracy. This stylistically brilliant work was only partially published during Bulgakov's lifetime due to censorship, but was immediately recognized by the literati as an important work. The other stories collected here range from a sequence about the Civil War to Bulgakov's early reportage on the rebuilding of Moscow in the early 1920s, stories which now have a strikingly contemporary ring. Bulgakov describes the swindlers who arrived along with NEP, a program for the limited return to a market economy, as well as the vast reconstruction as the city is brought back from the destruction of civil war. Bulgakov, who burst on the world literary scene in the 1960s with the publication of his long-suppressed The Master and Margarita, has continued to enjoy tremendous success both in and out of Russia where productions of his plays and adaptations of his prose works have found new audiences. |
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Pagina 39
thing, as soon as you find out you will have a roof over your head at night, you
suddenly feel the effects of not having slept for three days. On the bridge, two
lights break up the gloom. From the bridge we plop into the darkness again. Then
a ...
thing, as soon as you find out you will have a roof over your head at night, you
suddenly feel the effects of not having slept for three days. On the bridge, two
lights break up the gloom. From the bridge we plop into the darkness again. Then
a ...
Pagina 104
What's that scummy thing? What's with the feathers? What, have you gone crazy?
Where's your part?" "Hee-hee. He's got a haircut a la the Bolsheviks." "Nothing of
the sort," lied Yury Leonidovich, blushing a deep color. This, however, was the ...
What's that scummy thing? What's with the feathers? What, have you gone crazy?
Where's your part?" "Hee-hee. He's got a haircut a la the Bolsheviks." "Nothing of
the sort," lied Yury Leonidovich, blushing a deep color. This, however, was the ...
Pagina 208
I swear that not one person in Kiev knew what these mysterious fourteen letters
meant, but one thing I do know, history signalled that something was about to
begin. It started and then continued for four years. What happened during that
time in ...
I swear that not one person in Kiev knew what these mysterious fourteen letters
meant, but one thing I do know, history signalled that something was about to
begin. It started and then continued for four years. What happened during that
time in ...
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LibraryThing Review
Gebruikersrecensie - gbill - LibraryThingThese stories were all written before Bulgakov started work on his masterpiece “The Master and the Margarita”, but unlike the novel, were published at the time. It’s an interesting mix; Bulgakov is ... Volledige review lezen
Notes on the cuff & other stories
Gebruikersrecensie - Not Available - Book VerdictThis book translates several of Bulgakov's early short stories and feuilletons for the first time. They effectively present Bulgakov's personal struggle with the idiocies of Moscow's bureaucracy ... Volledige review lezen
Inhoudsopgave
Red Stone Moscow | 121 |
The Capital in a Notebook | 129 |
Moscow City of Churches | 155 |
Copyright | |
5 andere gedeelten niet weergegeven
Overige edities - Alles weergeven
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
answered asked babushkas beard began Berdyansk blue Bolsheviks boots bridge building Bulgakov burned cabman Cavalry church cigarette coat comrades Cuff Curzon dark Doctor Bakaleinikov door entryway everything eyes face feuilleton flashed Genzulaev glass going gray haidamaks hand happened head heart host Ingush jacket Karl Marx Kiev Knut Hamsun Kolka Kolya Komarov Lev Tolstoy light Lito live looked Moscow Nepman night Notes old babushkas pale Petliura play poet pounds Pushkin rush Russian Shabolovka Street sitting Slobodka slogans Slyozkin smiled smoke snow soldiers someone Soviet stopped story streetcar tailcoat Teatralnaya Square theater There's thing Tiflis took turned Tverskaya Street Tverskoi Boulevard typhus Ukrainian Varvara Afanasievna Vasilisa Vladikavkaz voice walked wall wearing wife woman word write wrote young lady Yury Leonidovich Zinaida Ivanovna