Memoirs of a Hunter
Publisher,Alma Books
Publication Date,
Format, Paperback
Weight, 342 g
No. of Pages, 416
Shelf: FICTION / ADULT FICTION / LITERARY FICTION
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Turgenev’s first major publication, Memoirs of a Hunter is a series of tales based largely on the author’s own experiences while hunting on his mother’s estate of Spasskoye, where he became aware of the iniquities of the system of serfdom and the privations and indignities suffered by the Russian peasantry. Told from the perspective of a dispassionate, observing narrator, the stories in this volume are concerned with the relationship between landowner and labourer, presenting a vivid and moving portrait of life in the era before the emancipation of the serfs in 1861 – a watershed whose advent some believe was hastened by Turgenev’s sympathetic depiction of the ordinary folk of rural Russia.
Originally published individually in the St Petersburg journal Sovremennik before appearing as a single volume in 1852, and presented here in a masterful new translation by Michael Pursglove, this landmark collection of stories established the literary reputation of the author, who considered it his most significant contribution to Russian literature, and is universally regarded as a milestone in the Russian realist tradition.
If you enjoyed Memoirs of a Hunter, you might like to read Fathers and Children, Virgin Soil, A Nest of the Gentry, Faust, On the Eve, Rudin, Smoke and The Diary of a Superfluous Man and Other Novellas.
Alma Classics is committed to making available a wide range of literature from around the globe. Most of the titles are enriched by an extensive critical apparatus, notes and extra reading material, as well as a selection of photographs. The texts are based on the most authoritative edition and edited using a fresh, accessible editorial approach. With an emphasis on production, editorial and typographical values, Alma Classics aspires to revitalize the whole experience of reading classics.
About the Author
Ivan Turgenev (1818–83) was a novelist, poet and dramatist, and now ranks as one of the towering figures of Russian literature. His masterpiece, Fathers and Children, is considered one of the greatest novels of the nineteenth century.
About the Translator
Born in 1944, Michael Pursglove was educated at Bradford Grammar School, King’s College, Cambridge and New College, Oxford. He subsequently taught Russian language and literature at the universities of Ulster, Reading, Exeter and Bath. He has published translations of many Russian prose texts, by authors ranging from Bunin and Grigorovich to Pilnyak, Platonov and Kazakov. In retirement he has published (with Alma Classics) translations of Turgenev’s Fathers and Children and Smoke.
Dimensions: 12.95 x 2.79 x 19.56 cm