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Portraits Without Frames

Autor Ozerov, Lev Traducere de Maria Bloshteyn, Robert Chandler
en Limba Engleză Paperback
Isaac Babel, Dmitry Shostakovich, and Anna Akhmatova star in this series of portraits of some of the greatest writers, artists, and composers of the twentieth century.

"We stopped and Shklovsky told me / quietly, but clearly, / 'Remember, we are on our way out. / On our way out.' And I recalled / ... the wall of books, / all written by a man / who lived / in times that were hard to bear." Lev Ozerov (1914-1996), born Lev Goldberg, was a prominent Russian-language poet and literary critic of the Soviet era. His finest book, Portraits Without Frames (1996), comprises fifty intimate, skillfully crafted accounts of meetings with important figures, ranging from fellow poets like Anna Akhmatova and Boris Pasternak, to prose writers like Isaac Babel and Andrey Platonov, to artists and composers like Vladimir Tatlin and Dmitry Shostakovich. It is both a testament to an extraordinary life and a perceptive mini-encyclopedia of Soviet culture. Composed in delicate, rhythmic free verse, Ozerov's portraits are like nothing else in Russian poetry.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781681372686
ISBN-10: 1681372681
Pagini: 184
Greutate: 0.36 kg

Notă biografică

Lev Ozerov (1914-1996) was born Lev Goldberg in Kyiv, Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire. He began to publish poems in the early 1930s, and as his literary career took off, he adopted a Slavic-sounding pseudonym (from ozero, the Russian word for "lake"), though he never rejected his Jewish roots. Ozerov was a close friend of many prominent Yiddish poets, including Leyb Kvitko and Shmuel Halkin, whose work he translated into Russian. He was also one of the first to write, in both prose and verse, about the Babi Yar massacre in 1941. His commitment to giving voice to the voiceless also found expression in his work as a critic and editor. In 1946, while serving on the staff of the journal October, Ozerov helped the great poet Nikolay Zabolotsky return to print after eight years in the Gulag. Ozerov's review of a 1958 collection of Anna Akhmatova's verse broke the so-called "blockade" against her work, and the edition he published of Boris Pasternak's poems in 1965 marked the beginning of that poet's slow posthumous rehabilitation after the Zhivago affair of 1957-1958. But perhaps Ozerov's greatest contribution--as both a poet and an advocate for the unjustly silenced--is his collection Portraits Without Frames, which was published in 1999, three years after his death.

Robert Chandler's translations from Russian include works by Alexander Pushkin, Teffi, Vasily Grossman, and Andrey Platonov. He has also written a short biography of Pushkin and has edited three anthologies of Russian literature: Russian Short Stories from Pushkin to Buida, Russian Magic Tales from Pushkin to Platonov, and, with Boris Dralyuk and Irina Mashinski, The Penguin Book of Russian Poetry. His translation of Vasily Grossman's Stalingrad will be published by NYRB Classics in 2019. He runs a monthly translation workshop at Pushkin House in London.

Boris Dralyuk is the executive editor of the Los Angeles Review of Books. His recent translations include Isaac Babel's Red Cavalry and Odessa Stories and Mikhail Zoshchenko's Sentimental Tales. He is the editor of 1917: Stories and Poems from the Russian Revolution.

Maria Bloshteyn was born in Saint Petersburg and emigrated to Canada when she was nine years old. She is the author of The Making of a Counter-Culture Icon: Henry Miller's Dostoevsky and the translator of, most recently, Anton Chekhov's The Prank (available from NYRB Classics).

Irina Mashinski was born in Moscow and emigrated to the United States with her family in 1991. She is the author of nine books of poetry in Russian and edits the journal Cardinal Points. Along with Robert Chandler and Boris Dralyuk, she edited The Penguin Book of Russian Poetry.