Book Chevengur PDF Download - Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler
Download ebook ➡ http://ebooksharez.info/pl/book/695099/922
Chevengur
Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler
Page: 592
Format: pdf, ePub, mobi, fb2
ISBN: 9781681377681
Publisher: New York Review Books
Download or Read Online Chevengur Free Book (PDF ePub Mobi) by Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler
Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler PDF, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Epub, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Read Online, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Audiobook, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler VK, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Kindle, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Epub VK, Chevengur Andrey Platonov, Robert Chandler, Elizabeth Chandler Free Download
Overview
Chevengur is a revolutionary novel about revolutionary ardor and despair. Zakhar Pavlovich comes from a world of traditional crafts to work as a train mechanic, motivated by his belief in the transformative power of industry. His adopted son, Sasha Dvanov, embraces revolution, which will transform everything: the words we speak and the lives we live, souls and bodies, the soil underfoot and the sun overhead. Seeking communism, Dvanov joins up with Stepan Kopionkin, a warrior for the cause whose steed is the fearsome cart horse Strength of the Proletariat. Together they cross the steppe, encountering counterrevolutionaries, desperados, and visionaries of all kinds. At last they reach the isolated town of Chevengur. There communism is believed to have been achieved because everything that is not communism has been eliminated. And yet even in Chevengur the revolution recedes from sight.
Comic, ironic, grotesque, disturbingly poetic in its use of language, and profoundly sorrowful, Chevengur—here published in a new English translation based on the most authoritative Russian text—is the most ambitious of the extraordinary novels that the great Andrey Platonov wrote in the 1920s and 1930s, when Soviet Russia was moving from revolutionary euphoria to state terror.