Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1978. - 487 c.
Перевод с русского: Robert Daglish
Название русского оригинала: Нетерпение
Скан 600 dpi Роман повсящен народовольцам. Автор пытался проанализировать появление таких личностей как террорист Желябов и его сотоварищей.
The gifted Soviet writer Yuri Trifonov, a State Prize winner, is well known for two novels The Quenching of the Thirst and Students, a trilogy of novellas The Exchange, A Preliminary Summing Up and The Long Goodbye, and numerous short stories.
He has long been interested in historical subjects. His Reflection from a Fire (1966) looked back at the revolutionary past and his most recent historical novel The Impatient Ones (1972) tells the story of the legendary Andrei Zhelyabov (1850-1881), one of the leaders of the People’s Will movement, and his comrades. They displayed the greatest self-sacrifice, Lenin said of the members of the People’s Will,
and . astonished the world. Undoubtedly these sacrifices were not in vain; undoubtedly they promoted, directly or indirectly, the subsequent revolutionary education of the Russian people.
In a preface to the novel the well-known Soviet literary critic Alexander Svobodin describes the author’s life and work.
Перевод с русского: Robert Daglish
Название русского оригинала: Нетерпение
Скан 600 dpi Роман повсящен народовольцам. Автор пытался проанализировать появление таких личностей как террорист Желябов и его сотоварищей.
The gifted Soviet writer Yuri Trifonov, a State Prize winner, is well known for two novels The Quenching of the Thirst and Students, a trilogy of novellas The Exchange, A Preliminary Summing Up and The Long Goodbye, and numerous short stories.
He has long been interested in historical subjects. His Reflection from a Fire (1966) looked back at the revolutionary past and his most recent historical novel The Impatient Ones (1972) tells the story of the legendary Andrei Zhelyabov (1850-1881), one of the leaders of the People’s Will movement, and his comrades. They displayed the greatest self-sacrifice, Lenin said of the members of the People’s Will,
and . astonished the world. Undoubtedly these sacrifices were not in vain; undoubtedly they promoted, directly or indirectly, the subsequent revolutionary education of the Russian people.
In a preface to the novel the well-known Soviet literary critic Alexander Svobodin describes the author’s life and work.