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Manuscripts Don't Burn
Manuscripts Don't Burn: Mikhail Bulgakov: a Life in Letters and Diaries | J.A.E. Curtis
8 posts | 2 read | 7 to read
The Russian playwright and novelist Mikhail Bulgakov (1891 - 1940) is now widely acknowledged as one of the giants of twentieth-century Soviet literature, ranking with such luminaries as Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn. In his own lifetime, however, a casualty of Stalinist repression, he was scarcely published at all, and his plays reached the stage only with huge difficulty. His greatest masterpiece, The Master and Margarita, a novel written in the 1930s in complete secrecy, largely at night, did not appear in print until more than a quarter of a century after his death. It has since become a worldwide bestseller. In Manuscripts Don't Burn, J.A.E. Curtis has collated the fruits of eleven years of research to produce a fascinating chronicle of Bulgakov's life, using a mass of exciting new material - much of which has never been published before. In particular, she is the only Westerner to have been granted access to either Bulgakov's or his wife Yelena Sergeyevna's diaries, which record in vivid detail the nightmarish precariousness of life during the Stalinist purges. J.A.E Curtis combines these diaries with extracts from letters to and from Bulgakov and with her own illuminating commentary to create a lively and highly readable account. Her vast collection of Bulgakov's correspondence is unparalleled even in the USSR, and she draws on it judiciously to include letters addressed directly to Stalin, in which Bulgakov's pleads to be allowed to emigrate; letters to his sisters and to his brother in Paris whom he did not see for twenty years; intimate notes to his second and third wives; and letters to and from well-known writers such as Gorky and Zamyatin. Manuscripts Don't Burn provides a forceful and compelling insight into the pressures of day-to-day existence for a man fighting persecution in order to make a career as a writer in Stalinist Russia.
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Moray_Reads
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Mikhail Afansyevich Bulgakov is one of my favourite writers and Curtis has done a wonderful job compiling his letters to provide an excellent picture of his life and character. Censorship hit him hard and his writing is full of frustration and not a little bitterness. He was a complex character and must have been a difficult to live with, wilful, fickle, impulsive and selfish. But a the wry tone of his letters shows recognition of his own flaws 👇

Moray_Reads Through all are the major themes of his life and work, the relationship between power and guilt, the role of art and the artist and his concern about his own stage relationship with the Soviet regime. Julie Curtis provides excellent background information to each section without overwhelming the content with detail. It's a personal glimpse into the life of one of Russia's greatest writers and a wider picture of the precarious position of writers during the Stalinist period 8y
RohitSawant Fantastic review! 8y
saresmoore Really wonderful review & I love the photo, too! (edited) 8y
Moray_Reads @saresmoore Thank you! They're just a couple of my Master and Margarita related accessories 😁 8y
Moray_Reads @rohit-sawant Thank you! I very much recommend it if you're a Bulgakov fan, it could probably make you into one even if you're not 8y
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Moray_Reads
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My March stats a little late because I managed to squeeze in one more last night. Loved my nonfiction this month but there was some great fiction too.

rockpools Awesome as always! And Spaceman sounds amazing. (edited) 8y
Moray_Reads It really is, I loved it! I hope to see a lot more from Jaroslav Kalfar 8y
sprainedbrain Awesome! 👏👏👏 8y
Reviewsbylola That's amazing! 8y
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saresmoore
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This description sounds like someone else I know in a prominent leadership role...

Hobbinol Seriously! 👍🏻 8y
saresmoore @Hobbinol Always scary, but never surprising. I'm thinking I should read up on Marie Antoinette soon... 8y
Moray_Reads It seems to me like an intellectual inferiority complex for both Stalin and Trump - make those artists crawl and bring them down a peg or two and their creative, critical minds too! 8y
saresmoore @Moray_Reads Yes! Great point! 8y
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saresmoore
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Don't get me wrong, I understand that life in 1920's Moscow was less than ideal, but Bulgakov was, at times, quite the drama queen! Writers. 🙄

Poor Nadya. Between his elaborate requests for source materials and his criticism of the infrequency of her correspondence (not to mention his complaining), Mikhail's sister had to put up with a lot!

batsy "Your deceased brother" lmao 8y
Moray_Reads Particularly since he seems to be a very irregular correspondent himself! 8y
LauraBeth That is a LOT in one sentence 😀 sold a story, went to the soviet doc in the box and my knees are shot but I did mange to go to Pier One and get some pretty things! 8y
saresmoore @LauraBeth BAHAHAHA! 8y
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saresmoore
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Evening plans.

TheLibrarian Looks like a good evening! 8y
Laura317 Jealous! I have a basketball game background complete with yelling hubby. He thinks the refs can hear him. 😂🙄🙉 8y
saresmoore @TheLibrarian And look! I found a real, grown-up wine glass! 🍷 8y
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saresmoore @Laura317 Oof. I have been there! Nobody can be as bad as my Uncle Cecil, though. He's mostly deaf and mostly blind, but that doesn't stop him yelling at the refs AND players! 8y
LeahBergen 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 8y
LauraBeth That looks like it was a wonderful evening! 8y
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Moray_Reads
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My favourite letters are the ones between Bulgakov and Zamyatin ❤
@saresmoore @vivastory @bitterbear @ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled

saresmoore Eep! I need to get to these! 8y
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Moray_Reads
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MA Bulgakov is tired of your shenanigans, Director Popov. @vivastory @saresmoore @bitterbear @ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled

vivastory Ouch! 8y
Moray_Reads @vivastory the whole letter is... pointed to say the least! 8y
saresmoore Haha! He edges on melodramatic at times, but I kind of love it. 8y
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Moray_Reads @saresmoore He is so melodramatic! But there's such an urgency in his concerns, he sounds so desperate that even though I've rolled my eyes a few times I really feel for him 8y
Moray_Reads @saresmoore @vivastory The tone of this also remind me of a stroppy email I wrote only a couple of days ago... 8y
saresmoore He's a sensitive soul, an educated artist in a time of tumult. I mean, that's pretty relatable! 8y
ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled Between the lines: "I fart in your general direction" ? 8y
Moray_Reads @ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled 😂 That's definitely what he was going for! 8y
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saresmoore
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I've started reading this sort of in preparation for a buddy read of Mikhail and Margarita. It's some biography and a collection of diary entries and correspondence from Mikhail Bulgakov that chronicle much of his fascinating life (1917-1940). I'm really enjoying it.

This is from a letter Bulgakov wrote to his sister in December of 1917.

vivastory Have you read "Master & Margarita"? 8y
saresmoore @vivastory I haven't yet, but it's one of those I've read a lot about and always wanted to read. I have a physical copy coming that should arrive any day now, but I'm starting it via Hoopla along with this book. 8y
vivastory @saresmoore I've never read it but I'm going to start it this weekend. 8y
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Moray_Reads @vivastory @saresmoore you're in for a treat! I also have a list of academic articles about M&M if anyone wants them afterwards 😉 8y
ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled Wow - so fascinating - I struggled with Master and Margarita but still want to know more about Bulgakov. 8y
Suet624 I'm so glad you're enjoying it. 💕 8y
saresmoore @Moray_Reads Of course you do. 😉 And of course I do! 🤓 8y
vivastory @Moray_Reads I'd definitely be interested 8y
Moray_Reads @saresmoore @vivastory I'll hunt them out, there's a lot of interesting theories about the structure that I enjoyed reading about 8y
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