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The Nose and Other Stories by Nikolai Gogol

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The Nose and Other Stories

Nikolai Gogol, Susanne Fusso

Columbia University Press · Print & ebook · September 1, 2020

Reading lane: Literary Fiction

A Short Stories pick for readers exploring The Nose and Other Stories.

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Odd Little Worlds

A compact run of oddity and wit, with enough bite to keep the classroom chat awake.

Come here for

  • Playful absurdity, then the sideways sting
  • Short-form Gogol at full tilt

Expect

  • Layered stories
  • Cultural-literacy anchor

Book Details

Authors
Nikolai Gogol, Susanne Fusso
Publisher
Columbia University Press
Published
September 1, 2020
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Literary Fiction · Russian & Former Soviet Collections
Reading lane
Literary Fiction

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Literary Fiction

  • Russian & Former Soviet Collections

About This Book

Nikolai Gogol’s novel Dead Souls and play The Government Inspector revolutionized Russian literature and continue to entertain generations of readers around the world. Yet Gogol’s peculiar genius comes through most powerfully in his short stories. By turns—or at once—funny, terrifying, and profound, the tales collected in The Nose and Other Stories are among the greatest achievements of world literature. These stories showcase Gogol’s vivid, haunting imagination: an encounte...

Read full description

Nikolai Gogol’s novel Dead Souls and play The Government Inspector revolutionized Russian literature and continue to entertain generations of readers around the world. Yet Gogol’s peculiar genius comes through most powerfully in his short stories. By turns—or at once—funny, terrifying, and profound, the tales collected in The Nose and Other Stories are among the greatest achievements of world literature. These stories showcase Gogol’s vivid, haunting imagination: an encounter with evil in a darkened church, a downtrodden clerk who dreams only of a new overcoat, a nose that falls off a face and reappears around town on its own, outranking its former owner. Written between 1831 and 1842, they span the colorful setting of rural Ukraine to the unforgiving urban landscape of St. Petersburg to the ancient labyrinth of Rome. Yet they share Gogol’s characteristic obsessions—city crowds, bureaucratic hierarchy and irrationality, the devil in disguise—and a constant undercurrent of the absurd. Susanne Fusso’s translations pay careful attention to the strangeness and wonder of Gogol's style, preserving the inimitable humor and oddity of his language. The Nose and Other Stories reveals why Russian writers from Dostoevsky to Nabokov have returned to Gogol as the cornerstone of their unparalleled literary tradition.

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