An edition of Мастер и Маргарита (1966)

The Master and Margarita

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  • 4.18 ·
  • 71 Ratings
  • 391 Want to read
  • 25 Currently reading
  • 96 Have read

Buy this book

Last edited by Lisa
July 3, 2018 | History
An edition of Мастер и Маргарита (1966)

The Master and Margarita

  • 4.18 ·
  • 71 Ratings
  • 391 Want to read
  • 25 Currently reading
  • 96 Have read

Written during Stalin's regime in the 1930s, but not published until 1967, The Master and Margarita is an intricate allegory of good and evil and one of the best examples of protest literature ever written. Author Mikhail Bulgakov takes listeners on a journey through the literary streets of Moscow as the lead character, Satan disguised as a black magician named Woland, torments the city's people. Woland finally finds the Master, the man he has been looking for, whose story about Pontius Pilate becomes intertwined with the original tale, creating a parallel narrative.

source: https://www.recordedbooks.com/title-details/9781470348946

Publish Date
Publisher
Recorded Books
Language
English

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Previews available in: Italian Russian Polish English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Il Maestro e Margherita
Il Maestro e Margherita: All'amico segreto / Lettera al governo dell'Urss
2015, Oscar Mondadori
paperback in Italian - Oscar classici. moderni 1991 Marzo (32)
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита
2015?, [publisher not identified]
paperback in Russian
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита
2015, AST
Paperback in Russian
Cover of: The Master and Margarita
The Master and Margarita
2013 January 01, Recorded Books
eAudio in English
Cover of: Mistrz i Małgorzata
Mistrz i Małgorzata
2012, Dom Wydawniczy "Rebis"
Paperback in Polish
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита
2009
paperback in Russian
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита
2006, EKSMO
hardcover in Russian
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита
1999, Grove Press
paperback
Cover of: The Master and Margarita
The Master and Margarita
1995, Grove Press
paperback in English
Cover of: Мастер и Маргарита
Мастер и Маргарита: roman
1994, "Sibirskai͡a kniga"
Hardcover in Russian
Cover of: The Master and Margarita
The Master and Margarita
1972, Collins and Harvill Press/Fontana Books
paperback in English - Fourth impression

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Translation Of
Мастер и Маргарита
Translated From
Russian

Contributors

Narrator
George Guidall

The Physical Object

Format
eAudio

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26466487M
ISBN 10
1470348942
ISBN 13
9781470348946
OCLC/WorldCat
937888644
Goodreads
40699658

Work Description

The battle of competing translations, a new publishing phenomenon which began with One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, now offers two rival American editions of Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita. Mirra Ginsburg's (Grove Press) version is pointedly grotesque: she delights in the sharp, spinning, impressionistic phrase. Her Bulgakov reminds one of the virtuoso effects encountered in Zamyatin and Babel, as yell as the early Pasternak's bizarre tale of Heine in Italy. Translator Michael Glenny, on the other hand, almost suggests Tolstoy. His (Harper & Row) version is simpler, softer, and more humane. The Bulgakov fantasy is less striking here, but less strident, too. Glenny: ""There was an oddness about that terrible day...It was the hour of the day when people feel too exhausted to breathe, when Moscow glows in a dry haze..."" Ginsburg: ""Oh, yes, we must take note of the first strange thing...At that hour, when it no longer seemed possible to breathe, when the sun was tumbling in a dry haze..."" In any case, The Master and Margarita, a product of intense labor from 1928 till Bulgakov's death in 1940, is a distinctive and fascinating work, undoubtedly a stylistic landmark in Soviet literature, both for its aesthetic subversion of ""socialist realism"" (like Zamyatin, Bulgakov apparently believed that true literature is created by visionaries and skeptics and madmen), and for the purity of its imagination. Essentially the anti-scientific, vaguely anti-Stalinist tale presents a resurrected Christ figure, a demonic, tricksy foreign professor, and a Party poet, the bewildered Ivan Homeless, plus a bevy of odd or romantic types, all engaged in socio-political exposures, historical debates, and supernatural turnabouts. A humorous, astonishing parable on power, duplicity, freedom, and love.

Excerpts

At the sunset hour of one warm spring day two men were to be seen at Patriarch's Ponds.
added by Lisa.

first sentence (English translation)

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
July 3, 2018 Edited by Lisa Added edition.
July 3, 2018 Edited by Lisa Added new cover
July 3, 2018 Created by Lisa Added new book.