ORENBURGSKY, Sergey Gussiev (Gusev-Orenburgsky)
Title | The Land of the Fathers: Translated by Nina N. Selivanova. |
---|---|
Illustrator | McIntosh, Frank |
Publisher | London Jonathan Cape |
Date | [1925] |
Book ID | 37886 |
First Edition |
Description
8vo., in original dust-wrapper with publisher’s forth-coming books to back. 298 pp.. Published by Cape in London but book printed in U.S.A.. First U.K. edition first published by Dial Press, New York in 1924.
A very nice clean tight copy. Dust-wrapper somewhat age-darkened, internally excellent. appears unread.
Translated from the the original Russian by Nina Nikolaevna Selivanova. Orenburgsky [Серге́й Иванович Гусев-Оренбургский] was a member of the Moscow literary group Sreda and greatly influenced by Gorky. He left Russia for New York via Harbin after the Revolution. Gusev-Orenburgsky, a former Orthodox priest, was the first person to write an honest account of the 1919-1920 pogroms. Only after he fled to Harbin could he get ‘The Crimson Book: Pogroms of 1919-120 in Ukraine’ published. The present title, published in Russian in 1905, is an acute satire of Russian provincial life on the eve of the First Revolution.
Price:
£80.00