Russian: Difference between revisions
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==='''20th Century'''=== | ==='''20th Century'''=== | ||
Pelevin - The Clay Machine-Gun (1996) | #Pelevin - The Clay Machine-Gun (1996) | ||
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Maksim Gorky | Maksim Gorky | ||
[[Category: Lost Generation]] | [[Category: Lost Generation]] |
Revision as of 16:01, 25 April 2012
An Overview of Russian Literature
Many users intellectuals hipsters of /lit/ will tell you that Russian literature is best literature. This is not the case at all. In fact, Russian literature is among the worst there is to offer in the world of literature, only beating out African and Asian literature, which are both boring shitfests themselves so that's not really saying anything.
One of the big names of Russian literature is Fyodor Dostoevsky. Mentioning his name in any /lit/ thread = guaranteed_replies.jpg. This is due to the fact that /lit/ users can't think for themselves and would praise Dostoevsky's warm shit if he smeared it onto pieces of paper and called it a story. In reality, however, Dostoevsky is wordy and his novels contain overly boring subplots which have nothing to do with the central plot of the story whatsoever. Imagine Dumas but boring and with overly sentimental characters, who "pale" or "redden" every goddamn time they say or hear or do something. For example, Dostoevsy's The Brothers Karamazov contains two long chapters dedicated to the life of a dying priest or elder or some stupid shit who is much more inferior than any minor characters in the novel. None of this has any relavancy to the original plot, which is a trio of kids who want to kill their father, which is actually interesting. But the words and the way the story is told only have to do about 10% with the main plot.
All in all, don't read Russian literature. If you want to read some good books about depressed people go read some of the Lost Generation authors.
19th Century
Title | Authors | Year | Pages | Description | Cover |
A Hero of Our Time | Mikhail Lermontov | 1841 | 208 | ||
Dead Souls | Nikolai Gogol | 1842 | 512 | ||
Diary of a Madman and Other Stories | Nikolai Gogol | 1842 | 368 | ||
Oblomov | Ivan Goncharov | 1859 | 496 | ||
Sketches From a Hunter's Album | Ivan Turgenev | 1852 | 416 | ||
Fathers and Sons | Ivan Turgenev | 1862 | 336 | ||
The Golovlyov Family | Mikhail Saltykov | 1876 | 344 | ||
Great Short Works of Leo Tolstoy | Leo Tolstoy | ~ | 720 | ||
Anna Karenina | Leo Tolstoy | 1877 | 864 | ||
War and Peace | Leo Tolstoy | 1869 | 1440 | ||
Notes From Underground | Fyodor Dostoevsky | 1864 | 160 | ||
Crime and Punishment | Fyodor Dostoevsky | 1866 | 718 | ||
The Idiot | Fyodor Dostoevsky | 1869 | 656 | ||
The Brothers Karamazov | Fyodor Dostoevsky | 1880 | 796 | ||
Demons | Fyodor Dostoevsky | 1872 | 768 | ||
Woe From Wit | Aleksandr Griboyedov | 1823 | 160 | ||
The Plays of Anton Chekhov | Anton Chekhov | ~ | 400 | ||
Stories of Anton Chekhov | Anton Chekhov | ~ | 496 | ||
The Collected Stories | Alexander Pushkin | ~ | 608 | ||
Lady McBeth of Mtsensk and Other Stories | Nikolai Leskov | 1865 | 432 |
20th Century
- Pelevin - The Clay Machine-Gun (1996)
Maksim Gorky