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The Twelve Chairs (European Classics (Northwestern Univ Pr)) |
List Price: $16.05
Your Price: $10.91 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: Gentlemen of the Jury, things are moving! Review: This is a farcical tale of three men in search of treasure buried in one of 12 identical armchairs. The story is very much a buddy tale of adventures and misadventures as the characters do almost anything to get their hands on the chairs in the Soviet Union of the 1920's. However, the story of the treasure hunt and the Marx Brothers like characters is really only the backdrop to a much deeper purpose, as The Twelve Chairs effectively describes the period of transition from czarist to Soviet rule. In between the tribulations of the heroes are many details of the food that was being served, student accomodations, railway and public construction projects, housing sooperatives and less than honest public servants. It is also very interesting to see how helpless the former upper class - the nobility - had become and how the Soviet Union, at least in its early days, could be exploited by the street smart like Ostap Bender. This is a very funny book that is also informative and is well worth reading. Inevitably, Bulgakov comes to mind as a complementary read; though he is somewhat more direct in his accusations of the regime.
Rating: Summary: Soviet Union Review: This is one of the best and the funniest books ever written in the Soviet Union. Everyone in Russia knows it by heart. By writing this book, authors were able to shine the light on the Soviet system back than and even now. I recommend it very much.
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