Age Ago: A Selection of Nineteenth-Century Russian Poetry FROM THE PUBLISHER
In what will become the standard anthology in the field, An Age Ago collects representative selections from these great Russian poets, many of whom have not, until now, been available in English.
Though a sampler, An Age Ago contains an impressive array of voices and themes: The poems bear a striking resemblance to the nineteenth-century Russian novel in their emphasis on individual experience. Introspective by nature, they also represent equally forceful attempts to forge a national identity. The competing strains of the private and the public surface in delicate balance.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
This newly translated anthology of 11 19th-century Russian poets will both delight and educate readers interested in Russian literature and history. The poems are accessible today primarily because they focus on such universal metaphysical and private issues as love, time, aging, jealousy, war, nature and death. Lyrical, strictly structured with traditional rhyme schemes and meters, the verse is an unusual combination of Romantic language and subject matter and rational theory stemming from the Age of Enlightenment. The anthology balances political, philosophical and personal poems nicely, and the selections complement each other, displaying the individual styles of the authors as well as their common concerns. The poets represented range from the well-known Aleksandr Pushkin and Mikhail Lermontov to the less familiar (to Americans) Prince Vyazemsky and Nikolai Yazykov. The translation is skillful, retaining both the formal aspects of the original verse and its colloquialisms. Brief biographies of the authors are included. This fine anthology is marred only by its slimness: enticed readers will wish for a more comprehensive selection. (July)
Library Journal
$9.95. poetry The 19th century was Russian literature's Golden Age, and many of its prose writersTolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Gogol among themhave achieved justifiable fame in the West. Unfortunately, such equally great poets as Pushkin, Lermontov, Batyushkov, Zhukovsky, and Fet have not had their due. These are among the poets represented in this new anthology, selected by Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky. Intense and lyrical, the poems reflect the precarious lives of their authors, many of whom had promising careers cut short by ``epidemics, the chains of a dungeon, a bullet received on the battlefield or in the course of a duel. . . .'' Brodsky's commendable selections offer many of the best-loved and oft-memorized poems of the Russian people. Alphonse Vinh, Yale Univ. Lib.