Synopses & Reviews
In his prime, satirist Mikhail Zoschenko was more widely read in the Soviet Union than either Pasternak or Solzhenitsyn. His stories give expression to the bewildered experience of the ordinary Soviet citizen struggling to survive in the 1920s and ’30s, beset by an acute housing shortage, ubiquitous theft and corruption, and the impenetrable new ideological language of the Soviet state. Written in the semi-educated talk of the man or woman on the street, these stories enshrine one of the greatest achievements of the people of the Soviet Union their gallows humor.
Housing block tenants who reject electricity because it illuminates their squalor too harshly, a young couple who live in a bathroom, a railway-line manager making a speech against bribery who accidentally mentions his own affinity for kickbacks in all of Zoschenko's characters, petty materialism is balanced with a poignant faith in the revolutionary project. Zoschenko, the self-described "temporary substitute for the proletarian writer," combines wicked satire and an earthy empathy with a brilliance that places him squarely in the classic Russian comic tradition. Jeremy Hicks's translation of The Galosh brings together sixty five of Zoschenko's finest short stories bringing the choice writings of perhaps Soviet Russia's most humorous and moving writer to American readers for the first time.
"You have all the qualities of a satirist, a very acute sense of irony accompanied by lyricism in an extremely original way. I don't know of such a combination anywhere else in literature." Maxim Gorky to Mikhail Zoschenko, September 15, 1930
Review
"Written from the trenches of everyday life under a totalitarian regime, these stories read like war dispatches, yet with the skewed humor and manic invention of...Irish writer Flann O'Brien." Los Angeles Times
Review
"Zoshchenko brought out the latent comedy of people's adaptation to new ways." New Yorker
About the Author
Mikhail Zoschenko (1895-1958) was born in Poltava, but lived nearly all of his life in St. Petersburg, Russia. He fought in World War I, where he was wounded and gassed, causing him chronic health problems. He published his first collection of short stories in 1921 and was greeted with enormous popular success. He worked as a writer and translator of fiction, essays, screenplays, and drama until his death.