Available Formats
Chevengur
By (Author) Andrey Platonov
Translated by Robert Chandler
Translated by Elizabeth Chandler
Vintage Publishing
Harvill Secker
2nd December 2023
30th November 2023
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
891.7342
Hardback
592
Width 162mm, Height 240mm, Spine 49mm
854g
A Soviet Don Quixote from one of the greatest 20th-century prose writers, author of The Fountain Pit and Soul. A celebrated masterpiece available in its full version in English for the first time. A sort of Soviet Don Quixote, Chevengur is the story of a craftsman who wanders around the U.S.S.R. hoping to ease human misery with his inventions. Considered one of the most important novels of the Soviet era, this is the first full version to be made available in English. Chevengur is a philosophical novel that is also rich in psychological, social, and sensuous detail. Although it was never publishable in the USSR, it now stands as one of the most celebrated of Soviet novels, and along with The Foundation Pit, it is the most ambitious and moving of Andrey Platonov's efforts to take the measure of a world undergoing revolutionary transformation. Zakhar Pavlovich, a gifted craftsman, moves from traditional village life to the world of industry. He falls in love with steam locomotives; he wishes to harness the power of machines to bring an end to human misery, and yet before long he is disillusioned. His adopted son, Sasha Dvanov, sets out across the steppes in pursuit of revolution, together with his companion, Kopionkin, a knight errant of the martyred revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg. Perhaps communism will be born spontaneously of human yearning In the town of Chevengur, a group of impatient Bolsheviks are liquidating the bourgeoisie and the half-bourgeoisie, and relocating all the buildings. They are hoping to bring about communism, spontaneously. Translated by Robert Chandler and Elizabeth Chandler
Andrey Platonov was born near Voronezh in 1899. From 1918 he published articles in the "thick" Moscow journals before becoming a war correspondent during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-45. He died in 1946 and it was not until the 1980s that his great novels The Foundation Pit and Chevengur were finally published in Russia.