Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 29th May 1992
Paperback
Published: 27th February 2017
Hardback
Published: 6th June 2023
Paperback
Published: 26th July 2004
Hardback
Published: 10th September 2019
Paperback
Published: 10th October 2007
Paperback
Published: 1st September 2018
Paperback
Published: 2nd December 2021
Paperback
Published: 12th March 2019
Paperback
Published: 7th January 2010
The Master and Margarita
By (Author) Mikhail Bulgakov
Translated by Michael Glenny
Introduction by Simon Franklin
Everyman
Everyman's Library
29th May 1992
19th March 1992
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
891.7342
Hardback
448
Width 134mm, Height 210mm, Spine 30mm
586g
Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita - a fiercely satirical fantasy. "My favorite novel -it's just the greatest explosion of imagination, craziness, satire, humor, and heart." Daniel Radcliffe. The devil with his retinue, a poet incarcerated in a mental institution for speaking the truth, and a startling re-creation of the story of Pontius Pilate, constitute the elements out of which Mikhail Bulgakov wove The Master and Margarita, the unofficial masterpiece of twentieth-century Soviet fiction. Long suppressed in its native land, this account of strange doings in Moscow in the 1930s provides us with the essence of the sceptical, trenchant, unadulterated voice of dissent
Mikhail Bulgakov (1891 - 1940) was born and educated in Kiev where he graduated as a doctor in 1916, but gave up the practice of medicine in 1920 to devote himself to literature. In 1925 he completed the satirical novella The Heart of a Dog, which remained unpublished in the Soviet Union until 1987. This was one of the many defeats he was to suffer at the hands of his censors. By 1930 Bulgakov had become so frustrated by the political atmosphere and the suppression of his works that he wrote to Stalin begging to be allowed to emigrate if he was not to be given the opportunity to make his living as a writer in the USSR. Stalin telephoned him personally and offered to arrange a job for him at the Moscow Arts Theatre instead. In 1938, a year before contracting a fatal illness, he completed his prose masterpiece, The Master and Margarita. He died in 1940. In 1966-7, thanks to the persistance of his widow, the novel made a first, incomplete, appearance in Moskva, and in 1973 appeared in full.