Prázdny
0,00 €
 
-2 %
Notes from Underground

Notes from Underground

Dátum vydania: 01.09.1996
Published in 1864, Notes from Underground is considered the author's first masterpiece - the book in which he -became- Dostoevsky - and is seen as the source of all his later works. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, whose acclaimed translations of The Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment have become the standard versions in English, now give ...
Bežná cena knihy: 19,74 €
Naša cena knihy: 19,35 €
Ušetríte: 2 %
Zasielame: Vypredané
Detaily o knihe
Počet strán: 136
Rozmer: 132x201x13 mm
Hmotnosť: 160 g
Jazyk: Anglicky
EAN: 9780679734529
Rok vydania: 1996
Žáner: Angličtina - beletrie
Typ: Paperback
Zákazníci, ktorí si kúpili túto knihu, si kúpili aj...
Jeden mluví, dva koukají
Vlasta Švejdová
0,00 €
Mantra jóga Džapa
Šrí Svámí Šivánanda
10,89 €
Zápisník - Violet, micro 70x90
autor neuvedený
8,41 €
Psí roky
Günter Grass
0,00 €
O knihe
Published in 1864, Notes from Underground is considered the author's first masterpiece - the book in which he -became- Dostoevsky - and is seen as the source of all his later works. Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, whose acclaimed translations of The Brothers Karamazov and Crime and Punishment have become the standard versions in English, now give us a superb new rendering of this early classic. Presented as the fictional apology and confession of the underground man - formerly a minor official of mid-nineteenth-century Russia, whom Dostoevsky leaves nameless, as one critic wrote, -because 'I' is all of us- - the novel is divided into two parts: the first, a half-desperate, half-mocking political critique; the second, a powerful, at times absurdly comical account of the man's breakaway from society and descent -underground.- The book's extraordinary style - brilliantly violating literary conventions in ways never before attempted - shocked its first readers and still shocks many Russians today. This magnificent new translation captures for the first time all the stunning idiosyncrasy of the original.