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About a writer trying to get an apartment in the bureaucratic clog of the Soviet system.

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4 reviews
The Ivankiad is a story made effective by its truth. If I were to write a novel detailing the amount of departments, officials, and committees Vladimir Voinovich was forced to confront in an attempt to move into his own apartment, I would be told to dial it back a little.

But Vladimir is telling his own story, and it's both funny and exasperating. I wasn't surprised in the slightest that Voinovich was forced to leave the Soviet Union just a few years after The Ivankiad's release, as he pulls no punches in his denunciation of Soviet bureaucracy and the men who benefit from it.

There's nothing earth-shattering in here, but as this was a backup purchase after a failure to find his far-more-famous The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of show more Private Ivan Chonkin at a book sale, this was a pleasant surprise. It's a quick read, and I'd call it required reading for anyone curious about the more mundane effects of Soviet oppression. show less
Instead of Greece and Troy we have Voinovich and Ivanko, with the role of Helen played by...the apartment?

The author's story of his struggle for a Moscow apartment rightfully his against the well-connected toady, Sergei Ivanko, is a quick and enjoyable read. Purporting to be a true story, but reading like a novel, the tale tracks the author's battles against bullying, threats, and bureaucratic corruption in this epic little war, complete with clandestine entry into enemy territory.

Voinovich was a Soviet-era dissident author who was forced to flee Russia, only returning after Gorbachev's rise to power.

I really enjoyed this and look forward to trying his more famous work, The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin.
½
This is a non-fiction memoir of sorts that takes place over the course of less than a year in Moscow, Russia. The title, the Ivankiad, is most likely a concatenation of the name of the nemesis of the main character, one Sergei Ivanko, and 'jeremiad' which is defined as a literary work expressing a bitter lament. The author, Vladimir Voinovich, fresh off circumventing the censoring of his best novel by ensuring a copy makes its way to the West, ends up in an unexpected struggle with a competitor for an apartment. The apartment building is a cooperative dedicated to housing writers (although others related to the writing trade have made it in) and on Voinovich's side, he was promised the apartment. On Ivanko's side is that he is highly show more connected in the Communist Party with powerful officials, and he is the final say on what gets published in some cases of fiction works.

The book is a satire and mostly well written, and spares us most of the 'bitter lamentation' the author likely really felt. The allocation of apartments in Communist Moscow--and other cities--has been well publicized and anguished over for decades in Russian fiction. Unlike an open market based on supply, demand, and income in the West, apportioning apartments in Moscow is a mix of board rules, ties to the Communist hierarchy and other influence, politicking, votes, and other angles. The book takes subtle shots at a number of values, such as unwillingness to act on principle for fear of losing some right (such as getting published), greed, dishonesty, and others. While there are some helpful comments, on the whole the book is more like a written version of a three-hour verbal account of an amazing story in the life of someone not willing to do whatever the Communist Party says to do.
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½
A writer in a Soviet apartment building complex learns that a larger 2 bedroom apartment is now vacant and according to the decision made by the special assembly of tenants, he and his pregnant wife were supposed to get this apartment, moving out of their small one-bedroom. However, as things come to pass, his expectation is dashed when he learns that a colonel who already owns a 3 bedroom apartment wishes to add this onto his current 3-bedroom apartment because he has American furniture and needs more space.

What ensues is an absurd satirical comedy of how a simple writer manages to use the bureaucracy of the Soviet Union to thwart the corruption that exists among some in the higher offices of the Soviet government.

It was most enjoyable.

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25 works; 2 members

Author Information

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42+ Works 1,614 Members
Vladimir Nikolayevich Voinovich was born in Stalinabad, Soviet Union on September 26, 1932. He worked as a herdsman and trained as a locksmith before serving in the Soviet Army from 1951 to 1955. He began writing poetry while in the army and in the mid-1950s started publishing stories in the magazine Novy Mir. One story, I'd Be Honest if They'd show more Let Me, about a construction supervisor whose conscience is bothered by the shoddy structures he is ordered to build, was singled out as being dangerous. His novel, The Life and Extraordinary Adventures of Private Ivan Chonkin, did not clear the Soviet censorship bar in 1969 but circulated underground and was published in Europe four years later. He was questioned repeatedly by the K.G.B. He left the country in 1980 and joined faculty of the Institute of Fine Arts in Munich. His Soviet citizenship was revoked in 1970 and he was unable to return for a decade. His other novels included Moscow 2042, The Fur Hat, Monumental Propaganda, and The Crimson Pelican. He died of a heart attack on July 27, 2018 at the age of 85. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Ivankiad
Original title
Ivankiada
Alternate titles
Ivan'kiada; The Ivankiad, or, The tale of the writer Voinovich's installation in his new apartment
Original publication date
1976
Dedication
Dedicated to:
Sergei Sergeevich Ivanko
and his comrades,
who placed at the author's disposal,
free of charge,
the richest factual material
and food for thought
Blurbers
Crankshaw, Edward; Brien, Alan; Dunlop, John
Original language
Russian

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
891.7Literature & rhetoricAsian LiteratureEast Indo-European and Celtic literaturesRussian and East Slavic languages
LCC
PG3489.4 .I53 .Z5213Language and LiteratureSlavic languages and literatures. Baltic languages. Albanian languageSlavic. Baltic. AlbanianRussian literatureIndividual authors and works1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
136
Popularity
239,633
Reviews
4
Rating
(3.77)
Languages
6 — Dutch, English, French, German, Russian, Swedish
Media
Paper
ISBNs
12
ASINs
4