Nervous People and Other Satires

by Mikhail Zoshchenko

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Typical targets of Zoshchenko's satire are the Soviet bureaucracy, crowded conditions in communal apartments, marital infidelities and the rapid turnover in marriage partners, and "the petty-bourgeois mode of life, with its adulterous episodes, lying, and similar nonsense." His devices are farcical complications, satiric understatement, humorous anachronisms, and an ironic contrast between high-flown sentiments and the down-to-earth reality of mercenary instincts. Zoshchenko's sharp and show more original satire offers a marvelous window on Russian life in the 20s and 30s. show less

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Zoshchenko was a Russian satirist writing during the Stalinist period in the USSR. His most published pieces were newspaper entries, sort of humorous op-eds, perhaps like a cross between the American syndicated newspaper humorist Dave Barry and the American humorist/folktale teller Garrison Keillor. Zoshchenko's pieces here are a lot of the ones in the more recently translated and published 'The Galosh' but this version seems a little more upbeat and less depressing. The book includes a detailed Introduction as well as a piece at the end which is not a short satire but rather an autobiographical essay/musing on how Zoshchenko became depressed and a search through his childhood events. It is a telling and welcome twist in a different show more direction after many many stories about city life during the 20's, 30's, and 40's in Russia among the middle and lower class. The book also fits in a couple of true short stories before the newspaper pieces. At times laugh out loud funny most of it is in a signature style which is ironic, wistful, a little funny, with a life message that insists on persistence and ignoring the futility of trying to get ahead while the path gets harder. show less

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Author Information

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147+ Works 813 Members
His first book of stories appeared in 1921 and became extraordinarily popular. However, he came under political pressure in the 1930s because some of his works, such as Youth Restored (1933), were too slyly ambiguous to fit the socialist realist model. In 1946, together with Akhmatova, he was singled out for an extraordinary attack by culture show more "boss" Andrei Zhdanov and was expelled from the Union of Soviet Writers. From then on he mostly produced translations. Zoshchenko was an extremely effective satirist who took his subjects from the paradoxes and incongruities of post-Revolutionary Russian society. He showed that human nature, which the new government was trying to change, would assert itself nonetheless. His language is fascinating. He often chooses lower-class narrators who speak in a mixture of the colloquial and of the new Soviet rhetoric---with highly comic results. During the 1930s, Zoshchenko's fiction began to explore philosophical and theoretical problems. A well-known example is Before Sunrise, the first part of which was published in 1943. In it the author analyzes his own psyche, in the process touching on the then-forbidden theories of Freud. Publication of the complete text of this work did not occur until 1972. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Gordon, Maria (Translator)
McLean, Hugh (Translator)

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
891.7342Literature & rhetoricLiteratures of other languagesEast Indo-European and Celtic literaturesRussian and East Slavic languagesRussian fictionUSSR 1917–1991Early 20th century 1917–1945
LCC
PZ3 .Z79Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

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143
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227,792
Reviews
1
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(3.88)
Languages
English, Russian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
2
ASINs
1