The White Guard 
A truthful and frightening recount of an ordinary pre-revolution family transformed by successive events in Ukrainian history.This isn't a horror story, and it doesn't have any gore, but the functioning and the breakdown of society; life of a family in such a society with its hopes and fears in absence of clear outcome is a fearsome sight to behold. This is especially true when we look back to contemplate the uneasy history of UkrSSR that followed and hundreds of thousands of people's lives
I've just finished The White Guard and I think it will stay with me for some time.I have the 2009 edition from Yale University Press which includes an introduction by the translator Marian Schwartz, as well as an introduction by Russian history professor Evgeny Dobrenko, who explains the historical and political context of the novel. I would encourage readers to seek out this edition, and to read the two introductions first.While The White Guard, Bulgakov's first novel, doesn't have the same

Vivid dramatisation of two turbulent (to say the least!) days in Kiev in the wake of the October revolution in 1918. Centred around the Turbin family and their immediate friends/acquaintances. Seamless blend of personal dramas and small/medium/large scale military operations and the consequent upheavals in normal life. 4.5 Stars, which would round up to 5 on historical document grounds, but rounds down to 4 as a novel.
Blood is cheap on those red fields...It is 1918, and Kiev in the Ukraine is at the swirling centre of the forces unleashed by war and revolution. The three Turbin siblings live in the house of their recently deceased mother in the city. They are White Russians, still loyal to the Russian Tsar, hoping against hope that he may have escaped the Bolsheviks and be living still. But there are other factions too the German Army have installed a puppet leader, the Hetman Skoropadsky, and the Ukranian
bulgakov thinks that every revolution is a caos, end of the world. this a novel about collapse of society. a bit old fashion in view. maybe. but great writer.
Hell of an evocation of Ukrainian Civil War from the vantage point of a pro-monarchy Russian family and their friends in Kiev. Important, complex history in a master work of fiction. Bulgakov illustrates the confusion and tension far from revolutionary Petrograd and how Kievans sort through the chaos and interpret events they cannot even attempt to control. As pointed out by others, it is ironic that Bulgakov and his characters see themselves as honorable reactionaries hoping to reinstate a
Mikhail Bulgakov
Paperback | Pages: 304 pages Rating: 4.04 | 10999 Users | 302 Reviews

Describe Books During The White Guard
ISBN: | 0099490668 (ISBN13: 9780099490661) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | Kyiv(Ukraine) Ukraine |
Commentary Supposing Books The White Guard
Although less famous than Mikhail Bulgakov's comic hit, The Master and Margarita, The White Guard is still an engrossing book, though completely different in tone. It is set in Kiev during the Russian revolution and tells the story of the Turbin family and the war's effect on the middle-classes (not workers). The story was not seen as politically correct, and thereby contributed to Bulgakov's lifelong troubles with the Soviet authorities. It was, however, a well-loved book, and the novel was turned into a successful play at the time of its publication in 1967.Identify Out Of Books The White Guard
Title | : | The White Guard |
Author | : | Mikhail Bulgakov |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 304 pages |
Published | : | 2006 by Vintage Books (first published 1926) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Cultural. Russia. Classics. Literature. Russian Literature. Historical. Historical Fiction |
Rating Out Of Books The White Guard
Ratings: 4.04 From 10999 Users | 302 ReviewsPiece Out Of Books The White Guard
A truthful and frightening recount of an ordinary pre-revolution family transformed by successive events in Ukrainian history.This isn't a horror story, and it doesn't have any gore, but the functioning and the breakdown of society; life of a family in such a society with its hopes and fears in absence of clear outcome is a fearsome sight to behold. This is especially true when we look back to contemplate the uneasy history of UkrSSR that followed and hundreds of thousands of people's lives
I've just finished The White Guard and I think it will stay with me for some time.I have the 2009 edition from Yale University Press which includes an introduction by the translator Marian Schwartz, as well as an introduction by Russian history professor Evgeny Dobrenko, who explains the historical and political context of the novel. I would encourage readers to seek out this edition, and to read the two introductions first.While The White Guard, Bulgakov's first novel, doesn't have the same

Vivid dramatisation of two turbulent (to say the least!) days in Kiev in the wake of the October revolution in 1918. Centred around the Turbin family and their immediate friends/acquaintances. Seamless blend of personal dramas and small/medium/large scale military operations and the consequent upheavals in normal life. 4.5 Stars, which would round up to 5 on historical document grounds, but rounds down to 4 as a novel.
Blood is cheap on those red fields...It is 1918, and Kiev in the Ukraine is at the swirling centre of the forces unleashed by war and revolution. The three Turbin siblings live in the house of their recently deceased mother in the city. They are White Russians, still loyal to the Russian Tsar, hoping against hope that he may have escaped the Bolsheviks and be living still. But there are other factions too the German Army have installed a puppet leader, the Hetman Skoropadsky, and the Ukranian
bulgakov thinks that every revolution is a caos, end of the world. this a novel about collapse of society. a bit old fashion in view. maybe. but great writer.
Hell of an evocation of Ukrainian Civil War from the vantage point of a pro-monarchy Russian family and their friends in Kiev. Important, complex history in a master work of fiction. Bulgakov illustrates the confusion and tension far from revolutionary Petrograd and how Kievans sort through the chaos and interpret events they cannot even attempt to control. As pointed out by others, it is ironic that Bulgakov and his characters see themselves as honorable reactionaries hoping to reinstate a
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.