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Psaume: Roman-méditation sur les quatre fléaux du Seigneur

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Le très beau texte de Gorenstein nous fait pénétrer dans un monde original, riche en couleurs, allant de la campagne ukrainienne des années trente jusqu'aux cercles de l'intelligentsia moscovite des années soixante, passionnée par le christianisme des slavophiles... et par l'alchimie du Moyen Âge ! À leur monde néanmoins bien réel, s'en superpose un autre, un monde fantastique où retentit la Parole divine et où revivent les prophètes de la Bible. Nous suivons dans ses pérégrinations terrestres un personnage mystérieux - l'Antéchrist - envoyé du Seigneur pour accomplir sa Malédiction, celle des quatre fléaux annoncés par le prophète Ezéchiel : le glaive, la famine, l'adultère et la peste... Personnage ambigu, mi-humain, mi-divin, il pose sur les épreuves du peuple russe au XXᵉ siècle (collectivisation, occupation allemande, persécutions staliniennes) un regard venu de très loin et de très haut : de la nuit des temps bibliques où Dieu communiquait avec les hommes. Cela confère à ce livre, dont le style d'une rare fécondité sert déjà fort bien l'animation romanesque, une dimension mythique et philosophique exceptionnelle.

424 pages, Paperback

Published September 1, 1984

About the author

Friedrich Gorenstein

24 books3 followers
Friedrich Naumovich Gorenstein (Russian: Фридрих Наумович Горенштейн), or Fridrikh Gorenshtein (1932–2002) was a Russian author and screenwriter. His works primarily deal with Stalinism, anti-Semitism, and the philosophical-religious view of a peaceful coexistence between Jews and Christians.
Gorenstein was born in 1932 to Jewish intellectuals in an orphanage. His father, a political economist, died under Stalinist anti-Semitic cleansings, maintained by the intelligence State Political Directorate (GPU). He was arrested and exiled to a gulag, where he was shot down in 1935 after trying to escape. His mother, an educator, died of tuberculosis in 1943 in a hospital in Orenburg. After her death, Gorenstein was raised by relatives in Ukraine who brought him with them to the Caucasus during the war.
Following World War II, Gorenstein struggled as an unskilled worker, until Nikita Krushchev's De-Stalinization allowed him to return to Kiev. He studied mining in Dnipropetrovsk in the 1950s and worked as a miner and mining engineer in the Ural Mountains and Ukraine.
Gorenstein moved to Moscow in 1962 to complete his scenarist course at the State Film University. He began writing screenplays to support himself. Most of his adaptions were censored, but he managed to finish his works, including writing the script for the 1972 science fiction film Solaris, directed by Andrei Tarkovsky. He also wrote books, but none were published except "Дом с башенкой" (The House with the Tower) (1964).
In 1977 Gorenstein released his works through foreign emigration presses to bypass censorship. That and his membership in the forbidden writers union and Almanach Metropol by Vasily Aksyonov got him in trouble with the Soviet government. He received a scholarship from the German Academic Exchange Service and emigrated to Berlin in 1979, working there as a writer until his death in 2002. His novel Place was nominated for the 1992 Russian Booker Prize.
In 1995 he was a member of the jury at the 19th Moscow International Film Festival.

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