10% OFF

Tarass Bulba

by Nikolai Gógol
Publisher: Relógio D'Água, March of 2024 ‧
17,00€
15,30€
10% OFF
IN STOCK -
free shipping
Tarass Bulba descreve a vida de um antigo cossaco de Zaporójie, Tarass Bulba, e dos seus dois filhos, Andrei e Ostap. Os filhos, que estudam na academia de Kiev, regressam a casa, de onde os três homens partem numa jornada para a Sietch de Zaporójie (a sede dos cossacos de Zaporójie, localizada no sul da Ucrânia), onde se juntam a outros cossacos e vão para a guerra contra a Polónia.

A personagem principal é baseada em várias personalidades históricas, e o enredo pode ser entendido no contexto do movimento de nacionalismo romântico na literatura, que se desenvolveu em torno de uma cultura étnica histórica.

«Um dos dez melhores livros de todos os tempos.»
Ernest Hemingway

Tarass Bulba

by Nikolai Gógol

Property Description
ISBN: 9789897830013
Publisher: Relógio D'Água
Release Date: March of 2024
Language: Portuguese
Dimensions: 155 x 235 x 13 mm
Cover: Softcover
Pages: 160
Format: Book
Categories: Books in Portuguese > Fiction > Romance
EAN: 9789897830013

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nikolai Gógol

Nikolai Gogol, a classic author of Russian literature, was born on March 20, 1809 (April 1 according to our Gregorian calendar) in the province of Poltava (Ukraine), into a family of medium-sized landowners (1200 hectares and 200 serfs of the land). He left for Petersburg at a young age, where he began to occupy successive jobs in ministries, was a teacher, while writing and publishing in magazines. He spent much of his life traveling abroad and in Russia.
Among his works are the collections of short stories Nights on the Farm at the Foot of Dikanka (1831-32), Mírgorod (1835), the Tales of Saint Petersburg («Nevsky Avenue» [1834], «Diary of a Madman» [1834], «The Nose» [1836], «The Portrait» [1841], «The Overcoat» [1841], and «The Caleche» [1836]) and the plays The Inspector (1836) and The Wedding (1842). The novel Dead Souls, of which only the first volume was completed, was published in 1842.
After a slow agony, Nikolai Gogol died of nervous illness and spiritual despair on February 21 (March 4 by our calendar)

(see more)

BY THE AUTHOR

PEOPLE WHO BOUGHT ALSO BOUGHT