10% de desconto
idioma: inglês
Editor: Woolf Haus Publishing, setembro de 2020 ‧
2,64€
10% DESCONTO CARTÃO
DISPONIBILIDADE IMEDIATA
Ebook para ADE

"Emotional quicksand ... illuminating a spiritual and social condition." - The New Yorker

Oblomov is a timeless novel and a monument to human idleness. 

From the pen of Ivan Goncharov (1812-1891) emerged a portrait of a young man - Ilya Ilyitch Oblomov - a dreamer, content above all to spend most of the day in bed. Rich in situational comedy, psychological complexity and social satire, Oblomov is a masterpiece of skilled and imaginative literature; comparable in its stature to Gogol''s Dead Souls, Tolstoy''s Anna Karenina and Dostoevsky''s Brothers Karamazov

This vivacious translation by Natalie Duddington captures all the subtle comedy and near-tragedy of the original.

For fans of Ottessa Moshfegh''s My Year of Rest and Relaxation, the classic Russian novel about an indolent aristocrat who spends most of his days in bed.


Praise

"From the start, Oblomov was recognized as a masterpiece. ''Goncharov is ten heads above me in talent,'' said Chekhov. ''I am in rapture over Oblomov and keep rereading it,'' said Tolstoy. And Dostoevsky came to rank it with Dead Souls and War and Peace. Who are we to disagree?" - Robert Gottlieb


"In each of us there resides a significant part of Oblomov." - Nikolay Dobrolyubov


"Emotional quicksand ... illuminating a spiritual and social condition." - The New Yorker


"In its particular sensitivity to the subtlety of Goncharov''s Russian, in its liveliness and its elegance [Duddington''s translation has] a freshness of manner that admirably matches the same enduring quality in the original." - Richard Freeborn, Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of London.


"Goncharov is ten heads above me in talent." - Anton Chekhov


"I am in raptures over Oblomov and keep re-reading it." - Leo Tolstoy


About the author

Ivan Aleksandrovich Goncharov (1812-1891) was a Russian novelist and travel writer, whose highly esteemed novels dramatize social change in Russia and contain some of Russian literature''s most vivid and memorable characters. 


Goncharov''s most notable achievement lies in his three novels, of which the first was A Common Story (1847), a novel that immediately made his reputation when it was acclaimed by the influential critic Vissarion Belinsky. Oblomov (1859), a more mature work, generally accepted as one of the most important Russian novels, draws a powerful contrast between the aristocratic and capitalistic classes in Russia and attacks the way of life based on serfdom. Goncharov''s third novel, The Precipice (1869), is a brilliant work of psychological prose. 


In all three novels Goncharov contrasts an easygoing dreamer with an opposing character who typifies businesslike efficiency; the contrast illumines social conditions in Russia at a time when rising capitalism and industrialization uneasily coexisted with the aristocratic traditions of old Russia.


Oblomov is an indisputable classic of Russian literature, the artistic stature and cultural significance of which may be compared only to other such masterpieces as Nikolai Gogol''s Dead Souls, Leo Tolstoy''s Anna Karenina, and Fyodor Dostoevsky''s Brothers Karamazov

Oblomov

de Ivan Alexandrovitch Goncharov

Propriedade Descrição
ISBN: 9781922491077
Editor: Woolf Haus Publishing
Data de Lançamento: setembro de 2020
Idioma: Inglês
Páginas: 468
Tipo de produto: eBook
Formato e Compatibilidade:
Coleção: Woolf Haus Classics
Classificação Temática: eBooks em Inglês > Literatura > Ficção
eBooks em Inglês > Outros
EAN: 9781922491077
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

SOBRE O AUTOR

Ivan Alexandrovitch Goncharov

Ivan Alexandrovich Gontcharov nasceu a 6 de Junho de 1812 em Simbirsk (actual Ulianovsk) e morreu a 15 de Setembro de 1891 em São Petersburgo. Filho de uma família de mercadores recém-nobilitados entrou para a Universidade de Moscovo em 1831, graduando-se em 1834. Em 1835, torna-se funcionário do Ministério das Finanças e em 1856 entra para os Serviços de Censura. Entre 1852 e 1855, participa numa expedição científica e naval ao Japão como secretário do almirante, regressa a São Petersburgo por terra, atravessando a Sibéria. Desta viagem resultará o livro A Fragata Pallada (1858). No ano seguinte, acusa Turguénev de plágio, que nunca será provado. Historicamente, vive num momento em que a intelectualidade russa começa a usar as suas obras, de modo consciente, no debate sobre o futuro colectivo do país. Publicou os seus primeiros textos literários em 1836 e o seu primeiro romance, Uma História Comum, em 1847. À época, a crítica literária considerou-o o sucessor de Gogol. Além dos mencionados, publicou os seguintes livros: Oblomov (1859) e O Precipício (1869). A partir da década de 1870, escreveu vários artigos de crítica e de memórias para jornais. Antes de morrer queimou vários manuscritos inéditos.

(ver mais)

LIVROS DA MESMA COLEÇÃO

DO MESMO AUTOR