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Пиры Валтасара. Кролики и удавы

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Kogda v SSSR vyshel znamenityy epos Fazilya Iskandera "Sandro iz Chegema", glavy (a po suti zakonchennoy povesti) "Piry Valtasara" v nem ne bylo. Takzhe byli izʺyaty tsenzuroy vse prochiye upominaniya o Staline. "Piry..." izdali tolʹko vo vremya perestroyki. No s tekh por vyroslo tseloye pokoleniye, kotoroye eto proizvedeniye, napolnennoye tonkoy ironiyey i glubokim znaniyem chelovecheskoy prirody, ne prochitalo. Kak i polnogo "Sandro...". Molodym, lyubyashchim, kak izvestno, f·ent·ezi, dolzhna priytisʹ po dushe i drugaya povestʹ Iskandera - "Kroliki i udavy". Khotya, pri nekotoroy pokhozhesti na f·ent·ezi, eto, konechno, antiutopiya. Prichem "Kroliki i udavy" boleye pryamo, chem drugiye izvestnyye antiutopii, govoryat ne o despotii voobshche i dazhe ne o bolʹshevist·skoy diktature, a imenno o stalinskom rezhime.Please ask if you need a specific version. The data provided here may not be correct. With buying and not asking you are accepting the book as is.

284 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2011

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About the author

Fazil Iskander

165 books48 followers
Fazil Abdulovich Iskander, also known in Russian as Фазиль Искандер, arguably the most famous Abkhaz writer, renowned in the former Soviet Union for his vivid descriptions, mostly written in Russian, of Caucasian life. He has written various stories, most famously "Zashita Chika", which star a crafty and likable young boy named "Chik".

The most famous intellectual of Abkhazia, he distanced himself from the Abkhaz secessionist strivings in the late 1980s and criticised both Georgian and Abkhaz communities of Abkhazia for their ethnic prejudices. He warned that Abkhazia could become a new Nagorno-Karabakh.

He was probably best known in the English speaking world for Sandro of Chegem, a picaresque novel that recounts life in a fictional Abkhaz village from the early years of the 20th century until the 1970s, which evoked praise for the author as "an Abkhazian Mark Twain." Mr. Iskander's humor, like Mark Twain's, has a tendency to sneak up on you instead of hitting you over the head. This rambling, amusing and ironic work has been considered as an example of magic realism, although Iskander himself said he "did not care for Latin American magic realism in general". A section of the novel dealing with Sandro's encounter with Joseph Stalin was made into the Russian film Baltazar's Feasts, or a Night with Stalin in 1989.

Iskander lived in Moscow and was a writer for the newspaper Kultura.

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