“The Soviet Union in American accounts tends to be a deprived, and depraved, hell, but there was also much that was sweet, and sheltered, about it, and this book’s portrayal of that country touches the bone for an exile. So does the novel’s evocation of that subtle Soviet sense of living with eyes and ears everywhere; of how sinners find crumbs even at a table set for the new saints of socialism; and of the integrity that survives, miraculously, even in such circumstances. So that the Muscovites mocked in the early part of the book receive, as well, a kind of hidden sympathy. No human being deserves the trauma of a life in a place like the USSR, and that person’s ultimate judgment must take that into account.”
Quote by Mikhail Bulgakov
Work
The Master and Margarita
This novel is a complex work that combines elements of fantasy and realism, featuring a protagonist who is a Soviet-era writer and his encounters with a mysterious woman named Margarita. The story is set against the backdrop of the 1920s and 1930s in the Soviet Union and is known for its rich symbolism and allegorical content. more
Author
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