Faithful Ruslan: The Story of a Guard Dog
By (Author) Georgi Vladimov
Melville House Publishing
Melville House Publishing
27th September 2011
United States
General
Fiction
891.7344
Paperback
224
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
230g
Set in a remote Siberian depot immediately following the demolition of one of the gulag's notorious camps and the emancipation of its prisoners, Faithful Ruslan is an embittered cri de coeur from a writer whose circumstances obliged him to resist the violence of arbitrary power. A starving stray, Ruslan and his cadre of fellow guard dogs dutifully wait for the arrival of new prisoners - but the unexpected arrival of a work party provokes a climactic bloodletting. Fashioned from the perceptions of an animal, Vladimov's indictment of the gulag exposes all man's cruelty.
"Among the greatest animal stories ever written..."
Richard Adams, author of Watership Down
Vladimov's particular distinction was as a dissident of immense moral courage, and as the author of Faithful Ruslan, one of the defining literary texts of the post-Stalin period. His life was one of constant vicissitudes, but his authority and fortitude remained firm to the end.
The Guardian
"Melville House has reissued one of the most brilliantly crafted dissident books of the Soviet era....It is a slim volume that should be as well known as Alexander Solzhenitsyns One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, but has been largely overlooked until now."The Weekly Standard
[A] perfectionist whose writing took him much effortVladimov produced a set of works that captured the mood of the times, but whose craft will ensure they survive.
The Independent
Known as a writer of strong conscienceMr. Vladimov's best-known work, Faithful Ruslan, is a chilling, cynical parable of false hopes in the post-Stalin era.
New York Times
Russias political reality can be best understood through Russian fiction. Todays Russia, for instance, calls to mind Faithful Ruslan, a novella by dissident writer Georgy Vladimov.
The St. Petersburg Times (Russia)
[An] exceptionally talented writer who has been cut down in mid-career and who is being hounded by the KGB. One reason for the persecution is his celebrated novella, Faithful Ruslan, which has circulated all over the country in samizdat.
Time (1980)
"Georgi Vladimov wrote for Novy mir until resigning from the Soviet Writers' Union in 1977, whereupon he established an office of Amnesty International, an officially outlawed organization. Vladimov emigrated to Germany in 1983 and was stripped of his Soviet citizenship. His novel A General and His Army won the Russian Booker Prize in 1995. Vladimov died in Frankfurt in 2003. A distinguished translator of Gorky, Dostoevsky, Bulgakov, and Solzhenitsyn, Michael Glenny died in 1990 in Moscow."