What do you think?
Rate this book


«Estar tumbado no era para Oblómov una necesidad como lo es para el enfermo o para el que tiene sueño, ni una casualidad como para el que está cansado, ni siquiera un placer como para el perezoso; era un estado normal.» Sin moverse de su diván, enfundado en un raído batín asiático, el héroe de esa novela es la personificación perfecta de la indo-lencia y la inactividad. Heredero terrateniente, eterno ausente de una hacienda fraudulentamente administrada, con una malograda carrera en el funcionamiento y en un re-traimiento temprano de la vida social, Oblómov conocerá de pronto, al cabo de los años y a instancias de su gran amigo, el emprendedor Shtolz, un extraño renacer, una misteriosa sacudida que por un momento le hará creer en la posibilidad de otra clase de vida, en la que asoman insospechadamente la confianza y el amor.
Oblómov (1859) de Iván A. Goncharov es una de las obras centrales de la literatura rusa, una de las máximas ilustraciones del tipo del “hombre superfluo” que tanto preocupó, asimismo, a Pushkin o a Turguéniev. Diálogos y gestos puros, una perfecta organización dramática, un humor sostenido y elocuente y una narración distanciada y comprensiva a la vez son algunas de las claves de esta magnífica novela en la que todo despide vida y claridad.
361 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1859
He was a man of about thirty-two or three, of medium height and pleasant appearance, with dark grey eyes, but with a total absence of any definite idea, any concentration, in his features. Thoughts promenaded freely all over his face, fluttered about in his eyes, reposed on his half-parted lips, concealed themselves in the furrows of his brow, and then vanished completely – and it was at such moments that an expression of serene unconcern spread all over his face. This unconcern passed from his face into the contours of his body and even into the folds of his dressing-gown.
‘Writes articles at night,’ Oblomov mused. ‘When does he sleep? And yet he probably earns five thousand a year. It’s his bread and butter. But to keep on writing, wasting his mind and soul on trifles, to change his convictions, sell his intelligence and imagination, do violence to his nature, be in a perpetual state of excitement and turmoil, knowing no rest, always rushing about… And write and write, like a wheel or a machine – write to-morrow, write the day after – the holidays, summer will come – always writing, writing! When is he to stop and have a rest? Poor wretch!’
‘Don’t talk rubbish! Man has been created to arrange his own life and even to change his own nature, and you’ve grown a big belly and think that nature has sent you this burden! You had wings once, but you took them off.’


