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177 years ago...

Insightful...

This book is a porthole to the life of the Intelligentsia.

A very educational book for those who study Napoleon

Great drama worksBoth plays are very readable, despite the workaday translations. Bulgakov's flights of fancy and sarcasm (a future world without crime, for example) are comic yet scary. If you want to really get to know Bulgakov's work, these plays, plus "Heart of a Dog". "White Guard" and "Master and Margarita" make a good starting collection of his best works.


Exotic and richFrom Uzbekistan, readers are treated to Three Brothers, a story retold by Sergei Palastrov in which the father of Tonguch-batyr (21), Ortancha-batyr (18) and Kenjdja-batyr (16) passed some wisdom to his boys. "I am not rich," he told them as he grew old, "and what you inherit after me will not last long."
Still, since he raised them in good health, as strong warriors with nothing to fear, he asked them to be honest (so they'd live without qualms), not to brag (so they'd never be ashamed), and not to be lazy (so they'd be happy). "For the rest," he told them, "it's your own lookout." He sent them off on three horses with food for a week to seek their fortunes.
They rode off together the next morning, and that evening divided the night into three watches. On the first watch, Tonguch heard a noise and drew his sword. Moments later, a lion emerged from the brush, and he slew it and returned to the camp with a small trophy from his prey. Ortancha-batyr's watch came second and Kendja-batyr's third.
The next night, on Ortancha-batyr's watch, Azhdar-sultan, King of the Snakes, emerged from the thicket and he slew him, just as his brother did the lion. He too returned to the camp with an easily concealed piece of his prey, as if nothing had happened.
The third night, the fire went out and Kendja-batyr left his brothers to thwart a band of robbers who intended to steal from the Shah. Before morning he returned to his brothers as if nothing happened, with a whole set of trophies.
The next morning, when the brothers came to the town, the Shah asked all strangers to come at once to his palace. The plot takes many detours and includes a tale within a tale. The illustrations by Uzbek artist Javlon Umarbekov are as lavish as the story, in which the young men followed their father's advice and became quite happy.
The next two tales hail from Kirghiz.
In Which was Biggest (retold by Mikhail Bulatov), readers again meet three brothers, who decided to live separate and apart. But they had only one bull between them, and failing to see how they could divide it, they set off to consult a wise man. The bull was so huge that, although one traveled by its head, one by its side and the last behind it with a stick, they traveled leagues apart. The tale grows quite fanciful, including an eagle larger than the bull, forty doctors who set sail in a man's eye, and a fox so large it was too big to be skinned on both sides. It also includes a riddle, which readers must solve.
Clever Ashik (retold by Dmitri Brudnyi) is the tale of a boy orphaned when he was small and taken in as a shepherd by a wealthy bei. The boy saved a frog, who blessed him in thanks with the gift of a magic pebble. To appease a neighboring khan, the boy solved a riddle (very like one in a Jewish folk tale called The Three Riddles) and outwitted him several times more, for which he was paid with a stay in the dungeon. How he got out is quite fantastic. But there the tale does not end. Ashik encountered still more adventures, in which he employed the devices of a fine Baba Yaga tale I know. This story, too, ends happily.
From Tajikistan come two tales--The Greedy Kazi and The Padishah's Daughter and the Young Slave--illustrated by Vladimir Serebrovsky, the chief artist at the Dushanbe's Aini Opera and Ballet Theater. The second tells of a young woman too haughty to consider any of the suitors who courted her. Despairing that he would never find a husband for her, the Padishah journeyed to other towns seeking a wise man to advise him. At last an old man who wrote fortunes on pebbles told him his daughter would marry a slave. Enraged, the Padishah ordered his slave beheaded. How the slave escaped him is all magic and delight.
The book closes with two Turkmen jewels, Yarty-Gulok and A Mountain of Gems, and a Kazakh tale, A bought Dream, handsomely illustrated by Kazakh artist Mendibai Alin.
I have read many folk tales, and many collections, and this one (despite its outdated title) is rich indeed. Alyssa A. Lappen


An excellent collection of essays on a big theme

an instant favorite

Charm and Sarcasm

One of the best resources I have ever seenThe text of this book is an excellent history of the Mennonites of southern Russia, giving a lot of good information on their closing days (my family had already left by that time). However, the real reason to get this book (if you are so lucky) is for the photos. They are of course black-and-white, but they provide a fascinating look into a life now lost. The pictures show a people who are wealthy, happy, and dressed in modern clothes. The pictures each have an informative description, but for some reason these were placed at the end of the book. That is really a minor complaint, though.
So, if you are interested in the Mennonites of southern Russia, then I highly recommend that you obtain a copy of this book. It really is one of the best resources I have ever seen.
Try: December 14, 1825!
Ninety two years before the Revolution of 1917 in which the Bolsheviks seized power, a miscarried Revolution occured which aimed for the first time ever, to change the Tsarist autocratic regime in Russia and institute a more liberal, democratic system. It failed, yet its repercussions continued to be felt for decades to come.
The First Russian Revolution-1825, by Dr. Anatole G. Mazour, published originally in 1937 and making extensive use of primary Russian sources stands the test of time as the definitive work on this little known yet profound event in the political life of Imperial Russia.
What came to be known as the Decembrist Revolt is traced back to its roots in the 18th century Russia where the development of an intelligensia is sparked by internal reforms and the Enlightenment thinking infiltrating from Western Europe. The economic problems caused by serfdom, where an astonishing 90% of the population of Russia lived as virtual slaves to the nobility; the influence of Russia's decisive participation in the Napoleonic Wars; Russian participation in European affairs; and increasing contact with the West stimulated the growth of these ideas.
The general brutality and cruelty of the Tsarist ministers and officals and their reaction to blossoming liberal ideas led to the development of secret societies of various philosophies and objectives culminating with a challenge the Tsarist government on December 14, 1825. It was the first day of the reign of Tsar Nicholas I.
The book is very well organized in an easy to read 290 pages which covers the social, political and economic conditions in the north and south of Russia, its relations with neighboring states, the revolt itself, and the trial and resulting punishment of the revolutionaries. It contains some surprising revelations, such as the extensive use of French as a language of Russian royalty and the nobility, and personal insights into Nicholas I and his unusual rise to the throne. Dr. Manzour ends with an analysis of the lasting effects of the revolt on Nicholas I personally and the Tsarist autocratic system, and the development of the Russian state.
Included in the appendix are excerpts of the testimony and letters of some of the principal revolutionists to the Tsar's investigative commission; their letters to Nicholas himself, and letters between Nicholas and his elder brother Grand Duke Constantine. Also included are numerous portraits of various participants. Unfortunately in the edition I have (1961), the letters between Nicholas and Constantine, as well as some additional documents are in their original French! Hopefully a future edition will translate these into English so they will be understandable, and with a footnote to indicate the original document was written in French.
This book is required reading for all those who want to understand the origins of Russia's long struggle to become a free, open, democratic society with a market economy ruled by laws and not by men. This endeavor continues, with more success, to this day...177 years later.