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Hardcover Pushkin Book

ISBN: 0880016744

ISBN13: 9780880016742

Pushkin

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin's preeminence as the father of Russian literature is undisputed. Lyric poet, writer of ironic fairy tales, and the author of the verse novel Evgeny Onegin, he lived a life... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

The Pushkin it is difficult for the non- Russian reader to know

Pushkin is for Russians the great beginning of their Literature. He is the seminal figure and the one who is still considered their greatest poet. Many people I know who were educated in Russia know much Pushkin poetry by heart. I had hoped by reading this biography to understand this 'passion for Pushkin' more fully. I had hoped to sense the greatness of the poetry. Unfortunately, I did not. I did however get a clear sense of the overall Pushkin story, the themes and interests of his life, the character of his major works. Much of this involves the story of Pushkin's erotic involvements in which he was not always the kindest of persons. His feeling of and for women primarily to their physical attractiveness. This had a central part in his not necessarily wise choice for a wife, and the story of jealousy, duelng for his honor, and his early death. In a way one has a sense that Pushkin had the mentality of a different time in relation to women. Feinstein makes it clear that in another realm Pushkin was more ethically commendable. He worked very hard and it is said created masterpieces in each realm each genre he touched upon. I will admit that my own readings of what many consider the greatest Pushkin of all, the verse- novel 'Evgeny Onegin' and the premier Pushkin story 'Ace of Spades' left me less than deeply moved. The brilliance, the great verbal play which are considered such an essential part of Pushkin's genius have never come across to me. There are however moving parts in this biography. Pushkin's loss of his greatest friend just as he was about to be married, his dedication to and learning from the peasant woman who raised him and in the process endowed him with a deep sense of Russian myth and folk- tale, his courage in going it alone over and over again even against the will of the political authorities- these are strong positives in the Pushkin story. Great Literature is one of mankind's most important spiritual sources. It can give us inspiration and love of life, hope and meaning. Pushkin has done that for so many. This book gives a fair account of the major works he created in doing this. It is not his fault nor is it the fault of the excellent author of this biography that in this case I do not really 'get it'.

Great book, passionate and thorough

Loved the book. Apart from minor inconsistencies, the facts are all straight. Given my native language is Russian, I found the book much more passionate, logical, journalistically straightforward, and impartial than most of the fatherland's writers.This is a good book about the strange life of one of the greatest poets of all times. And it brought me closer to understanding his personality, his affections, his art.

D'Anthés was bisexual?

Dostoevsky once said that Alexsandr Pushkin was the quintessential Russian man because of his compassion and empathy for mankind, despite all of the humiliation and misery that he suffered from his friends, family, and the rest of high society during the later years of his life. Although this description of Pushkin may be colored by Dostoevsky's own Russian nationalistic orientation, Pushkin's impact on Russian literature and culture remains undisputed.The first part of Feinstein's biography was a bit slow due to the monotonous presentation of Pushkin's love interests, one after another. However, a number of erotic poems and epigrams were included that Pushkin wrote during his earlier years which I found particularly amusing for their juvenile and frivolous nature. Considering the aura of sanctity that was built up around Pushkin's reputation as the figurehead of Russian literature after his death, these lyrics help to paint a picture of who the real man actually was. The plot finally picks up towards the end of the book with the introduction of Georges d'Anthés (the man who fatally shot Pushkin in a duel) and the description of d'Anthés' public flirtation with Natalya (Pushkin's wife), only to be followed by his sudden and suspicious marriage to Ekaterina (Natalya's sister). All of these events made Pushkin the focus of public scrutiny and humiliation, which inevitably led to his fatal encounter with d'Anthés. Feinstein presents a lot of evidence in an attempt to shed light on d'Anthés' complicated personality and why things happened as they did. Although most of this evidence is speculatory, it still makes for interesting reading.I encountered a number of editorial mistakes in this book which were a bit annoying, although they did not overly detract from the continuity of the plot. Some have already been mentioned by previous customer reviewers, such as the listing of Anna Petrovna Kern (one of Pushkin's premarital lovers) and Anna Petrovna as two separate people in the index when they are actually one in the same person. Additionally, Ibrahim Gannibal, Pushkin's legendary Negro great-grandfather who was a general under Peter the Great, was mistakenly identified as his grandfather at various points in the book. Most aggravating for me, however, was the author's habit of going back and forth in time, such that it became difficult to understand the sequence in which events took place.Overall, I found this book interesting and worth my time reading. Feinstein presents Pushkin's life story in an engaging and readable style that is well-suited for general readers who have little prior knowledge of the man or his works. Nevertheless, the book is detailed enough such that we are able to gain a good understanding of Pushkin's personality and the circumstances that motivated him to write each of his major works.

Wonderful!

It is hard to believe that the man regarded by most Russians as the cornerstone of their literature is not better known in the West; trying to understand Russia without knowing anything about Pushkin smacks of trying to understand the English-speaking world without knowing anything about Shakespeare. Ms. Feinstein does an excellent job describing the life and work of this extrordinary man and his effect on his times and the Russian people. The chapter on the events leading up to the fatal duel reads like Greek tragedy and I was alternately fascinated and horrified by the attitudes of Russian high society and the government towards Pushkin and his inevitable confrontation with d'Anthes. My two quibbles are that the epilogue really doesn't tell us much about what happened to the major characters in Pushkin's life after he died and that Ms. Feinstein's proofreader did not catch that Ibrahim Hannibal was Pushkin's maternal great-grandfather, not his maternal grandfather; the relationship is misstated a number of times in the book. These two fairly minor points aside, this is a book I would recommend to anyone wanting to know more about Russia's greatest writer, Blok's "one bright name: Pushkin."
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