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33 Moments of Happiness: St. Petersburg Stories (1995)

by Ingo Schulze

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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1491184,972 (3.38)2
An enchanting, fabulously bizarre and intriguing book of short stories by a prizewinning new German writer. Each episode in this dazzling debut collection captures the spark in some tiny detail of everyday life in contemporary St. Petersburg and fans it into a story that flares with comedy, surreal passion, heartbreaking indifference and mad Russian excess. There's a Mafia shoot-out in a disco, as told by a gun-toting Walter Mitty simultaneously thrilled and horrified by the carnage he is creating. There's a returning exiled writer so desperate to keep his reputation alive, now that he is no longer a professional dissident, that he will do anything to hold the interest of his retinue of reporters and cameras. There are three devils who appear for an evening at the steam bath, their revelries ending in cannibalism—or is the watching manager just mad? St. Nicholas comes back as a rich American. There is a gallery opening that gives new meaning to the term "installation." And on and on... These are sad, whimsical, macabre, bleakly funny stories, all told in a playful and voluptuous prose that is itself an homage to the great Russian masters whom Schulze is honoring—from Gogol to Pasternak, from Chekhov to Nabokov.… (more)
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Ingo Schulze is de tweede auteur op rij die zich van west naar oost verplaatst. Het verschil met Jaap Scholten is dat Schulze in de DDR is geboren. Hij heeft het communistische systeem daardoor aan den lijve ondervonden. Ook woont Schulze niet permanent in Rusland, hij verbleef in 1993 slechts een halfjaar in Sint-Petersburg.

Lees verder op deze pagina van mijn boekenblog. ( )
  DitisSuzanne | Dec 30, 2009 |
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» Add other authors (2 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Ingo Schulzeprimary authorall editionscalculated
Davids, TinkeTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Ich will es Ihnen erklären: Vor einem Jahr erfüllte ich mir einen langgehegten Wunsch und fuhr mit der Bahn nach Petersburg.
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An enchanting, fabulously bizarre and intriguing book of short stories by a prizewinning new German writer. Each episode in this dazzling debut collection captures the spark in some tiny detail of everyday life in contemporary St. Petersburg and fans it into a story that flares with comedy, surreal passion, heartbreaking indifference and mad Russian excess. There's a Mafia shoot-out in a disco, as told by a gun-toting Walter Mitty simultaneously thrilled and horrified by the carnage he is creating. There's a returning exiled writer so desperate to keep his reputation alive, now that he is no longer a professional dissident, that he will do anything to hold the interest of his retinue of reporters and cameras. There are three devils who appear for an evening at the steam bath, their revelries ending in cannibalism—or is the watching manager just mad? St. Nicholas comes back as a rich American. There is a gallery opening that gives new meaning to the term "installation." And on and on... These are sad, whimsical, macabre, bleakly funny stories, all told in a playful and voluptuous prose that is itself an homage to the great Russian masters whom Schulze is honoring—from Gogol to Pasternak, from Chekhov to Nabokov.

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