Bookbot

Ten years after Ivan Denisovich

Paramètres

  • 202pages
  • 8 heures de lecture

En savoir plus sur le livre

Ten years have passed since Nobel Prize laureate Alexander Solzhenitsyn's first novel, One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich, was published in the liberal Russian magazine Novy Mir; ten years in which Solzhenitsyn has plummeted from official favor and in which the brief liberalization of Soviet cencorship signaled by the novel's publication has been reversed. Zhores Medvedev traces in harrowing detail the celebrated novelist's developing encirclement - the machinations by which Solzhenitsyn was deprived of the Lenin Prize for One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich, the forcible confiscation of his literary papers, the intrigues by which his second novel, Cancer Ward, was barred from publication, and the threats which induced the Writer's Union to expel him.

Achat du livre

Ten years after Ivan Denisovich, Žores Aleksandrovič Medvedev

Langue
Année de publication
1973
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(rigide)
Nous vous informerons par e-mail dès que nous l’aurons retrouvé.

Modes de paiement

Personne n'a encore évalué .Évaluer

Titre
Ten years after Ivan Denisovich
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
A. A. Knopf
Publié
1973
Format
rigide
Pages
202
ISBN10
0394490266
ISBN13
9780394490267
Séries
Description
Ten years have passed since Nobel Prize laureate Alexander Solzhenitsyn's first novel, One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich, was published in the liberal Russian magazine Novy Mir; ten years in which Solzhenitsyn has plummeted from official favor and in which the brief liberalization of Soviet cencorship signaled by the novel's publication has been reversed. Zhores Medvedev traces in harrowing detail the celebrated novelist's developing encirclement - the machinations by which Solzhenitsyn was deprived of the Lenin Prize for One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich, the forcible confiscation of his literary papers, the intrigues by which his second novel, Cancer Ward, was barred from publication, and the threats which induced the Writer's Union to expel him.