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Blogger Viola said...

I'm an avid reader, and I've read Crime an Punishment and Ana Karenina, but that Master and Margarita sounds good too, I think I'll go look it up in the library... Thanks for the tips!

xx Viola

August 25, 2011 at 10:09 AM

Blogger Irina Sazonova said...

Thanks for this post, from a Russian. :)

It seems I'm one of those few people who don't like Master and Margarita. I first read it at school and didn't like it, several years ago I gave it another try and still it just fell felt for me.

My favorite Russian poet (and writer) has to be Alexander Pushkin. He seems to always be overlooked by foreign readers. In Russia they call him "the sun of Russian poetry/literature" and if one has to compare him, it's with either Byron or Shakespeare. I don't like using such big words (somehow I always think of dictators when I read them), but nevertheless you fall in love with his words, when you read his works. Eugene Onegin is a masterpiece, such perfect rhyme and rhythm and it just strikes me every time. I haven't read any translations, so I'm not sure if it's as good when it's non-original, but if someone asks me about a Russian classic, it's always him I read recommend.

The famous trio, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy and Gogol, I don't know how I feel about them. The first two are dogmatic, I feel. I feel these 3 get too much exposure as compared to some other talented writers and their works.

Slightly less famous authors are Chekhov and Nabokov, I prefer their works. Less well known is Turgenev, he is very good.

August 25, 2011 at 12:21 PM

Blogger julochka said...

true story, i'm so glad you wrote that!! i actually meant to say that i generally don't recommend chekhov because it's the one russian author people have generally read, but i got lost in M&M and forgot to write that. :-)

i probably should also have mentioned that i don't generally recommend pushkin because i'm not that keen on him myself...which i totally realize has more to do with me than with him. i'm just not much of a poetry person and i just find it all too FORMAL.

turgenev is ok, but second tier in my opinion...he gets a bit overshadowed by tolstoy (who needed an editor, frankly) and dostoevsky (i love his mania and that he wrote it all under extreme pressure).

i would have written my dissertation on andrei bitov, had i written one. but i think pushkin house is so linked to having read all of russian literature that i don't tend to recommend it....

hmm, it looks like i have another post to do about this one...

August 25, 2011 at 1:07 PM

Blogger Jennifer said...

I am so happy to see your post! I ordered Master & Margarita yesterday and can't wait to start reading. Thank you again for your wonderful suggestions!!

August 25, 2011 at 2:57 PM

Blogger McVal said...

LOL! That stretch of road IS pretty straight and boring...

August 25, 2011 at 3:45 PM

Blogger Tracy Golightly-Garcia said...

Hello Julie

Love this post! I love reading different literature--do you know any good British writers?

Have a good day(evening.

Best
Tracy :)

August 25, 2011 at 5:33 PM

Blogger Kelly said...

Your blog is amazing.. and I thank yo... I check in with you like with an old friend... Wonderfully enlightening and affirming! Just had to say so you keep doing what you're doing...

August 26, 2011 at 6:55 AM

Blogger Sammi said...

Thank you for this. It is something I was meaning to ask you about, and your recommendations shall go onto my goodreads list :)

August 26, 2011 at 6:07 PM

Blogger d smith kaich jones said...

the brothers karamazov was required reading in a literature class i once took, and, as classes & required reading sometimes do, it sucked out any pleasure i may have found in the story. (i cannot read anything by dickens to this day for the same reason.) hearing it from you makes me rethink it - i still own the book; it's way way up on the tip top shelf in the hallway. i will mull it over.

:)

August 26, 2011 at 7:32 PM

Blogger Pia K said...

i've always considered "crime and punishment" to be one of my favourite books, it's been quite a while since i last read it so perhaps i should put it to the test again... btw it was actually that book i left in copenhagen which then travelled with its finder to gdansk, london and brisbane:)

i studied russian in high school and then at university, sadly the teachers at uni were kind of crap (to be kind about it) and then i went with law instead. i remember it was pretty fantastic to read russian books in russian, it's such a beautiful, magical language! if you don't keep it up it slips away from you though, probably more than other languages within the latin alphabet.

myself i never got into "the master and margarita", i simply found it boring. it still resides in my book shelf though...

September 8, 2011 at 1:13 AM

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