A Dead Man's Memoir: A Theatrical Novel
By (Author) Mikhail Bulgakov
Edited by Andrew Bromfield
Introduction by Keith Gessen
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Classics
13th November 2007
4th October 2007
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
891.7342
Paperback
208
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 12mm
157g
A new translation of one of the most popular satires on the Russian Revolution and on Soviet society - first time in Penguin Classics This is Bulgakov's semi-autobiographical story of a writer who fails to sell his novel and fails to commit suicide. When his play is taken up by the theatre, literary success beckons, but he has reckoned without the grotesquely inflated egos of the actors, directors and theatre managers.
"The book is gentle in tone if fierce in substance."
-The New York Times Book Review
"Bulgakov is the first magical realist."
-Craig Raine, author of T.S. Eliot
Mikhail Afanasievich Bulgakov was born in 1891 in Kiev, today the capital of Ukraine. His father was a professor at the Theological Academy. After finishing high school, Bulgakov entered the Medical School of Kiev University, graduating in 1916. In 1913 he married Tatyana Lappa, who moved with him after graduation to provincial villages, where he practiced medicine. He wrote about his experiences as a doctor in his early works Notes on Cuffs and Notes of a Young Country Doctor. Andrew Bromfield is a regular translator from the Russian, and has translated works by Boris Akunin, Vladimir Voinovich and Irina Denezhkina, as well as titles by Victor Pelevin. Keith Gessen is a contributing editor at New York magazine. He is also co-editor of n+1, a new journal of literature and politics.