
A recurring theme in this volume sees a medic doing his best to escape whichever local Russian conflict (there were plenty to choose from at the time) he is about to be dragged into. Things were weird enough as they were, and all Bulgakov had to do was draw on his own experiences as a doctor and literary administrator. These stories, however, were written beforehand, in the early 1920s and, with one or two exceptions, there is little impulse to fabulism or (to use the term loosely) surrealism. The normal procedure for a Russian writer who wanted to ridicule the system was, first of all, to get the hell out of the Soviet Union.īulgakov is best known for his longer, more fable-like works The Master and Margarita and The Fatal Eggs (whose title, you will learn from the long, informative afterword to Notes on a Cuff, contains a multi-layered pun so untranslatable you wonder how much of its essence can survive in English). And, indeed, this director seemed far from being the least-educated person in the place, because he was doing two things at once: reading his book and waving his stick about. Then this director opened some book in front of him, looked at it and started waving his white stick about. For a start, he is puzzled by the conductor: One of the stories here – which have been translated into English for the first time (very well, as far as I can tell, by Roger Cockrell) – mocks the Bolsheviks’ well-intentioned policy of educating the masses by having a soldier tell us what he thinks of a performance of Verdi’s opera La Traviata he is forced to attend (he would rather have gone to the circus). Other search options in the drop-down menu are "Title Starts With", "Title Contains", and "Author".It’s one of those enduring literary mysteries: why didn’t Joseph Stalin have Mikhail Bulgakov bumped off? True, few of Bulgakov’s works saw the light of day in his own lifetime, but that could hardly have been a help to the writer, particularly one who so fearlessly – or recklessly – paraded the absurdities of communist rule. Then either push the Enter key on your keyboard, or click the GO! button. To use this method, simply type a word, words, or phrase into the blank at the top of the screen. NOTE: For searches with "AND", "OR", etc, use More Search Options. Word order and letter case do not matter. You'll be presented with the list of library items based on their relevancy to your search. It searches all titles, subtitles, authors' first and last names, various notes, and a number of other fields. It performs a Google®-type search (including support for putting phrases in quotes). Most likely, you'll want to use this simple search. Kids: If you like Percy Jackson - 69 titles Kids: If you like Harry Potter - 63 titles Kids: If you like Diary of a Wimpy Kid - 35 titles Kids: Graphic Novel School Stories - 38 titles Kids: Graphic Fantasy/Adventure - 43 titles Kids/Teens: Starting Out in YA - 124 titles

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