The Golovlyov Family
By (Author) Shchedrin
Introduction by James Wood
The New York Review of Books, Inc
The New York Review of Books, Inc
15th September 2006
31st May 2001
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
344
Width 128mm, Height 203mm, Spine 24mm
374g
Searingly hot in the summer, bitterly cold in the winter, the ancestral estate of the Golovlyov family is the end of the road. There Anna Petrovna rules with an iron hand over her servants and family-until she loses power to the relentless scheming of her hypocritical son Judas.
One of the great books of Russian literature, The Golovlyov Family is a vivid picture of a condemned and isolated outpost of civilization that, for contemporary readers, will recall the otherwordly reality of Macondo in Gabriel Garca Mrquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude.
Strikingly powerful, convincing, and impressive.
The New York Times
This is a tragic story, deeply moving, and by means of the figures that pass through it, relentlessly depicts the Russia that so inevitably prepared the Revolution. The book is a classic in its own country, and it is obvious why.
The Spectator
The Golovlyov Family has been described as the gloomiest of Russian novels. Certainly the characters are all wretched or unpleasant, and the reader of the novels who professes that strange but common English attitude to literature: Would I like to meet these people must leave the book alone. Shchedrins book is not gloomy; it is powerful. It communicates power. It places an enormous experience in our hands. How many realists simply indulge in an orgy of determinism and seek only evidence that indicates damnation.[Shchedrin] is not looking for quick moral returns. His method is exhaustive and not summary. The compensations of life are not moral; they are simply more life of a different kind.
V.S.Pritchett,The Nation
The whole novel is practically a picture of a complete dehumanization of human beings, of an absolute victory of matter over spirit. And as such it is strikingly powerful, convincing, and impressive.
The New York Times
Mikhail Evgrafovich Saltykov, pen-name Shchedrin, (1826-1889) is known as Russias greatest satirist. Born into the landed gentry, he worked as a civil servant while writing and editing for radical journals. Though he was exiled for seven years, he maintained an unflagging attack on Russias social institutions, the new bourgeois capitalists, and the cowardice of the educated classes. Shchedrin showed his talents in theFables, The History of a Town, and his masterpiece,The Golovlyov Family.
James Woodis a novelist, staff critic atThe New Yorkermagazine, andProfessor of the Practice of Literary Criticism atHarvard University.