Eugene Onegin (1823-31) is an eight-chapter novel in sonnets. The sonnet form employed is Pushkin's own devising, which he uses to modulate Mozart-like, between tragic profundity and sparkling humour, from exquisite lyrical descriptions of nature to devastating satire, all within a twinkling of the proverbial eyelid. The story and plot are simple, not unlike those of Pride and Prejudice, but with the ending left open. All Russian literature after Pushkin is influenced one way or another by Eugene Onegin, which is one of the most dazzling works of nineteenth-century European literature.
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Review:
"One of the living wonders of Nabokov's Nova Zembla is this huge scholarly miracle. . . . [W]hat Nabokov has done is to throw a bridge between Russian and American Culture, a bridge built out of his all-informative commentary and agonizingly honest translation."--Virginia Quarterly Review
About the Author:
James E. Falen is Professor of Russian, University of Tennessee at Knoxville. His previous publications include "Isaak Babel: Russian Master of the Short Story."
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- PublisherDedalus Ltd
- Publication date2004
- ISBN 10 1903517281
- ISBN 13 9781903517284
- BindingPaperback
- Number of pages262
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Rating