Reviews & Reflections on the Literature & Arts of Russia, Central & Eastern Europe "My Country is Russian Literature...."
Friday, 29 August 2008
Dark Avenues by Ivan Bunin
Ivan Bunin (1870-1953) was the first Russian writer to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. He was an emigre writer, whose masterpiece, "Dark Avenues", was written in Grasse during World War II. "Dark Avenues" is a collection of short stories which, according the One World Classics edition, is set "in the context of the Russian cultural and historical crises of the preceding decades". Bunin himself compared the book to Boccaccio's Decameron because it was created at the height of the Nazi regime "to escape to a different world, where there was no bloodshed and people were not burned alive" However, he also said of the stories in "Dark Avenues", : they are "only about love", but " its dark, and more often than not, gloomy and sinister avenues".
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