And the Earth Will Sit on the Moon: Essential Stories
By (Author) Nikolai Gogol
Translated by Oliver Ready
Pushkin Press
Pushkin Press Classics
30th April 2024
29th February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Classic fiction: general and literary
891.733
Paperback
224
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
No writer has captured the absurdity of the human condition as acutely as Nikolai Gogol. In a lively new translation by Oliver Ready, this collection contains his great classic stories - 'The Overcoat', 'The Nose' and 'Diary of a Madman' - alongside lesser known gems depicting life in the Russian and Ukrainian countryside. Together, they reveal Gogol's marvelously skewed perspective, moving between the urban and the rural with painfully sharp humour and scorching satire.Strikingly modern in his depictions of society's shambolic structures, Gogol plunders the depths of bureaucratic and domestic banalities to unearth moments of dark comedy and outrageous corruption. Defying categorisation, the stories in this collection range from the surreal to the satirical to the grotesque, united in their exquisite psychological acuteness and tender insights into the bizarre irrationalities of the human soul.
'Much to savour... With its diverse selection of canonical works, Oliver Ready's engaging, entertaining volume gives a good sense of Gogol's range and will find readers inside and outside classrooms' - TLS
'The most morally complete writer: baffled, outraged, reverent, mock-didactic, mocking, all at once. He honours life by feeling no one way about it' - George Saunders
'One of the most profound, and influential, writers Russia has ever produced, he is also probably the funniest' - Guardian
'The greatest artist that Russia has yet produced' - Vladimir Nabokov
'No previous translator of these stories has ever captured Gogol's free-floating lunacy with such fine-grained accuracy, truly bringing the moon and the earth together. Such a feat requires great daring and great attentiveness, the key ingredients of translational genius, which Oliver's every sentence demonstrates in full.' - Boris Dralyuk
Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol was born in 1809 in Ukraine, and moved to St Petersburg after his studies in 1828 to work in an obscure government ministry. His first collection of stories, Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka (1831), made him famous, and he went on to write several further collections of stories, as well as the play The Government Inspector. Part I of his great, and only novel, Dead Souls, appeared in 1842. In his later life he was increasingly tormented both physically and psychologically, and he burned much of his writing, including part II of Dead Souls. He died in 1852, possibly from self-starvation.