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As a mysterious gentleman and self-proclaimed magician arrives in Moscow, followed by a most bizarre retinue of servants - which includes a strangely dressed ex-choirmaster, a fanged hitman and a mischievous tomcat with the gift of the gab — the Russian literary world is shaken to its foundations. It soon becomes clear that he is the Devil, and that he has come to wreak havoc among the cultural elite of the disbelieving capital. But the Devil's mission quickly becomes entangled with the fate of the Master — the author of an unpublished historical novel about Pontius Pilate — who has turned his back on real life and his lover Margarita, finding shelter in a lunatic asylum after traumatic publishers' rejections, vilification in the press and political persecution.
Will the Devil manage to enlist the fiery Margarita into his ranks — will she remain faithful to the Master to the very end and come to his rescue? At the same time a satirical romp and a daring analysis of the nature of good and evil, innocence and guilt, The Master and Margarita is the crowning achievement of one of the greatest Russian writers of the twentieth century.
--back cover
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Previews available in: English Russian Italian Polish
Subjects
satire, humor, Politicians, Good and evil, Alienation, atheism, magicians, bands, political fiction, allegories, Fiction, Literature, Fantasy, Mental illness, Classic Literature, History, Russian Political fiction, Continental european fiction (fictional works by one author), Moscow (russia), fiction, Fiction, humorous, Fiction, satire, Slavic philology, E guo xiao shuo, Jerusalem, fiction, Soviet union, fiction, Fiction, historical, general, Fiction, action & adventure, Fiction, humorous, general, Jerusalem, Fiction, general, Literature, history and criticism, Russian fiction, Translations into English, Devil, Fiction, politicalPeople
The Devil, Woland, Koroviev, Behemoth, Azazello, Hella, Pontius Pilate, Yeshua Ha-Notsri, Mikhail Alexandrovich Berlioz, Ivan Nikolayevich Ponyryov, the Master, Margarita, Natasha Prokofyevna, Stephan Bogdanovich Likhodeyev, Grigory Danilovich Rimsky, Ivan Savelyevich Varenukha, Nikanor Ivanovich Bosoy, Fagotto, Aphranius, Levi Matvei, Caiaphas, Judas IscariotPlaces
Russia, Soviet Union, Jerusalem, Moscow, Patriarch's Ponds, Griboyedov's houseShowing 11 featured editions. View all 229 editions?
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Master and Margarita
2018, Alma Classics
Paperback
in English
- Revised edition
1847497829 9781847497826
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Il Maestro e Margherita: All'amico segreto / Lettera al governo dell'Urss
2015, Oscar Mondadori
paperback
in Italian
- Oscar classici. moderni 1991 Marzo (32)
8804342811 9788804342816
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The Master and Margarita
1972, Collins and Harvill Press/Fontana Books
paperback
in English
- Fourth impression
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Book Details
Edition Notes
UK
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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
first sentence (English translation)
Links outside Open Library
- Мастер и Маргарита (ru.wikipedia.org)
- The Master and Margarita - Wikipedia
- The Master and Margarita showed me just how easy it is to mess up a nation | Viv Groskop | Opinion | The Guardian
- Book of a lifetime: The Master and Margarita, By Mikhail Bulgakov | The Independent
- VIAF ID: 175580487 (Work)
- thegreatestbooks.org/items/1409
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- Created August 25, 2020
- 7 revisions
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December 9, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
July 26, 2021 | Edited by Lisa | Edited without comment. |
July 26, 2021 | Edited by Lisa | Added new cover |
July 26, 2021 | Edited by Lisa | Added link to IA copy. |
August 25, 2020 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Better World Books record |