Dead Souls

Dead Souls

$10.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.


Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.

Dead Souls stands as one of the towering masterworks of Russian literature, a darkly comic novel that chronicles the misadventures of the cunning Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov as he travels across provincial Russia purchasing the legal records of deceased serfs — so-called dead souls — in a audacious scheme to mortgage them for profit. Written by Nikolai Gogol and first published in 1842, the novel presents a biting and satirical portrait of greed, corruption, and the moral bankruptcy lurking beneath the surface of Russian society. With razor-sharp wit and grotesque caricature, Gogol populates his world with a memorable gallery of landowners, bureaucrats, and swindlers, each embodying a different form of human folly. The narrative argues, with both laughter and lament, that the real dead souls are not the serfs on paper, but the spiritually hollow men who profit from a corrupt system. This Penguin Classics edition makes this essential work of world literature accessible to modern readers in an authoritative English translation.

Author: Gogol
Format: Paperback

Genre: Classic fiction

Description


Condition remarks:
Condition: Good to fair. Paperback. Page Condition: Good - possible tanning. Markings: possible previous owner inscription.

Dead Souls stands as one of the towering masterworks of Russian literature, a darkly comic novel that chronicles the misadventures of the cunning Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov as he travels across provincial Russia purchasing the legal records of deceased serfs — so-called dead souls — in a audacious scheme to mortgage them for profit. Written by Nikolai Gogol and first published in 1842, the novel presents a biting and satirical portrait of greed, corruption, and the moral bankruptcy lurking beneath the surface of Russian society. With razor-sharp wit and grotesque caricature, Gogol populates his world with a memorable gallery of landowners, bureaucrats, and swindlers, each embodying a different form of human folly. The narrative argues, with both laughter and lament, that the real dead souls are not the serfs on paper, but the spiritually hollow men who profit from a corrupt system. This Penguin Classics edition makes this essential work of world literature accessible to modern readers in an authoritative English translation.