Everything Flows (Vintage Classics)

Everything Flows (Vintage Classics)

by VasilyGrossman (Author), RobertChandler (Translator)

Synopsis

'Everything Flows is as important a novel as anything written by Solzhenitsyn, and Robert Chandler's superb translation makes it a joy to read' Antony Beevor Ivan Grigoryevich has been in the Gulag for thirty years. Released after Stalin's death, he finds that the years of terror have imposed a collective moral slavery. He must struggle to find a place for himself in an unfamiliar world. Grossman tells the stories of those people entwined with Ivan's fate: his cousin Nikolay, a scientist who never let his conscience interfere with his career, Pinegin, the informer who had Ivan sent to the camps and Anna Sergeyevna, Ivan's lover, who tells of her involvement as an activist in the Terror famine of 1932-3. Everything Flows is Vasily Grossman's final testament, written after the Soviet authorities suppressed Life and Fate. 'Vasily Grossman is the Tolstoy of the USSR' Martin Amis

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: Vintage Classics
Published: 05 May 2011

ISBN 10: 009951916X
ISBN 13: 9780099519164
Book Overview: Translated into English for the first time, this is a fearless epic from one of the great writers of the twentieth century

Media Reviews
As eloquent a memorial to the anonymous little man in the Stalinist state as Dr Zhivago is to the artistic spirit in post-Czarist Russia and The First Circle to the scientific intelligentsia * New York Times *
Vasily Grossman is the Tolstoy of the USSR * Martin Amis *
Possibly the greatest chronicler of the second world war * Guardian *
Only Dante, in his account of Ugolino and his sons starving to death in a locked tower, has written of death from hunger with equal power -- Robert Chandler * London Review of Books *
Supplies a wealth of information about the social context and Soviet terminology -- Christopher Taylor * Guardian *
Author Bio
Vasily Grossman was born in 1905. In 1941 he became a correspondent for the Red Army newspaper, Red Star, reporting on the defence of Stalingrad, the fall of Berlin and the consequences of the Holocaust, work collected in A Writer at War. Life and Fate, his masterpiece, was considered a threat to the totalitarian regime, and Grossman was told that there was no chance of it being published for another 200 years. Grossman began Everything Flows in 1955 and was still working on it during his last days in hospital in September 1964.