The Master and Margarita (Penguin Modern Classics)

by Mikhail Bulgakov
The Master and Margarita (Penguin Modern Classics)  
published January 29th 2004 by Penguin Books Ltd
first published 1996
binding Paperback
isbn 0141187794   (isbn13: 9780141187792)
pages 432
description Surely no stranger work exists in the annals of protest literature than The Master and Margarita. Written during the Soviet crackdown of the 19...more
date added
03-02-07



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Robert
05/28/07

It is difficult to read the Master and Margarita without an uncomfortable awareness of one’s lack of understanding and ability to viscerally relate to the 1920’s Soviet Russia Bulgakov was enthusiastically eviscerating, and therefore easy (and maybe more enjoyable) to read it from a purely acontextual, Formalistic point of view. That being said, it is precisely those times where Bulgakov allows himself to overtly attack his enemies and speechify slightly on the stultifying nature of bureauc...more
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Martine
bookshelves: continental-european, fantasy, magic-realism, modern-fiction, modernism, russian
Read in February, 2008
What would happen if Satan were to alight on a modern metropolis like Moscow and wreak havoc in it? That's just one of the questions asked and answered in this twentieth-century Russian classic, which is said to have been the inspiration for the Rolling Stones song 'Sympathy for the Devil'.

You can see why Mick Jagger and his cronies would be intrigued by the devil as portrayed in The Master and Margarita. Bulgakov's Satan is not necessarily purely evil; he just punishes sceptics and ...more
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  7 comments

Libby
06/18/08

bookshelves: summerreading08, year-of-only-good-books
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Libby by: My lovely sister
recommends it for: Folklore fans, Lit buffs
Very little can prepare you for the wild ride that is Mikhail Bulgakov's "The Master and Margarita," especially if you've read other literature or folklore that have the devil as a character. What will be helpful, I suspect, is knowing a bit about the time and setting of the novel. Bulgakov wrote this book between 1930 and 1940 while living in Moscow under Stalin. The book is set in 1920, when everything was being taken under government control, from the distribution of food and bever...more
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Baiocco
bookshelves: fiction
recommends it for: Harry Potter fans, or people doing a survey of Russian writers

Russian authors are really impressing me lately. I've never read Tolstoy, and only cracked the surface on Dostoyevsky, but I keep coming across others that are demanding (in writing) a near-future trip to Russia absorb some weight in the planning department of my brain. We'll see.

Anyway, I read Master and Margarita because of I heard it inspired the Stones' song Sympathy for the Devil. I expected some sort of Da Vinci code es...more
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David
02/23/08

Read in February, 2008
This book started out nicely enough. It was your standard Satan (in the guise of foreign "consultant") strolling in the park predicts imminent decapitation of writers' association administrator via concurrence of oil spilled by Annuchka and a speeding, sharp-wheeled trolley. I know. You're rolling your eyes. Not that shopworn scenario again. Part 1 (of 2) is a grab bag of various (sometimes amusing) adventures, facilitated by Woland (the Devil) and his ragtag retinue comprised o...more
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  8 comments

Sean
03/29/08

Read in January, 2006
recommends it for: Readers interested in Russia, recent Russian history, and Russian literature
I'd love to say I loved this book, especially as I was really looking forward to it as one of the masterpieces of 20th Century Russian modernism. I'm crazy about all that Eastern European surrealist stuff but somehow although I appreciated the warped picture it provided of Russian life under the Soviet system (more than justifying any amount of surrealism), it just didn't hang together for me as a story, which being an author myself is one of my preconceptions of how fiction should function. May...more
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John
04/04/08

Read in April, 2008
A true masterpiece by a Soviet author on his deathbed. Recounts what happens when the Devil pays a five-day visit to 1930s Moscow and the attendant mischief that arises. A naked witch, a giant cat, a clownish choirmaster, and a fanged man make up his retinue. The novel explores the role of artists, Pontius Pilate, repression, and everything worthy of discussion. Not only that, it is extremely engaging, funny, a bit horrific, and passionate. The narrator, too, injects a unique voice into the stor...more
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Amanda
11/13/07

bookshelves: knock-your-socks-off
Read in November, 2007
It's the late 1920s in Moscow when the devil comes to town with his entourage, which includes a large vodka-swilling black cat named Behemoth. What happens with the devil visits a population that doesn't believe in anything? It's brilliant and quite funny. Bulgarov satirizes the Russian literary/intellectual scene, politics, society, religion, obviously, censorship. The second half has more fantastic elements, as women become witches and Satan's ball takes place in a small apartment (which remin...more
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katya
11/19/07

This book belongs to my favourites. you know, there are some books after you read them yuo feel somehow different about the world around you - well, that's what the book gave to me - the new understanding and appreciation of reality. i loved the satyr that Bulgakov used to decribe the Soviet society, each ide of that life - kind of absurd life it was. but even more i was fascinated by his Bible alusions - that was something really special in his story of Ieshua Ganozri (sorry for the spelling, i...more
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Lydia
05/09/08

Read in May, 2008
I really enjoyed this book although I didn't understand it. It's very fantastical like a lot of Russian literature. The representation of Satan and God seems very modern - kind of matter of fact, political almost. By that I mean that they work within a system - two parties who may or may not hate each other but they work within this system and do their jobs. They make agreements about people and where they belong in the afterlife. Satan and his group seem to dole out justice well . All the peopl...more
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Annie
07/14/07

Read in January, 2006
there are lots of songs that reference this book. i imagined it featured prominently in the "russian masters" portion of our literary allusions radio show.


* It is claimed that Mick Jagger was inspired by the novel in writing the song "Sympathy for the Devil".
* The grunge band Pearl Jam were influenced by the novel's confrontation between Yeshua Ha-Nozri and Pontius Pilate for the song, "Pilate" on their 1998 album "Yield".
* The L...more
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Patrick
Read in January, 2008
This book will really mess with your equilibrium.

Set in Soviet Russia, it's a rich satire full of the supernatural. Although the world is unbelievable, the author expertly builds it, and you can't help but be submerged.

The language, even in translation, feels rich and fresh. And startling. Its surprising and funny at times, dark and nightmarish at others (I actually did have nightmares, that's how vivid it was).

Posing questions of good and evil, gods and devils, shadow and light, ...more
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Ken
11/19/07

Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who can read
Having never read any of the 'great' Russian authors I approached the book with some trepidation, but that was tempered by the fact that this particular edition apparently once belonged to Beck!
The English translation (by Mirra Ginsberg) of this Bulgakov novel is so brilliant that I'm seriously considering learning Russian just to see how good the original text must have been..
The prose flows kineticly, bouncing the reader from the time of Pontius Pilate to 20th century Moscow to a ball i...more
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Logan
04/03/08

Read in June, 2005
From what I understand, there is supposed to be a lot of anti-Stalin satire in this book, but due to my limited knowledge of Stalin, I didn't see much of it. So based strictly on the plot/story, the book is really weird...but kind of cool. It basically can be broken down into four ongoing, intertwining narratives. My favorite characters were the group of evil misfits. The group is wicked, witty, and the best part of the book. For example, one of the devil's pals is a giant black tom cat that w...more
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David
01/06/08

bookshelves: 5q, read-in-2007, unexpectedly-terrific
Read in December, 2007
Upgraded to 5 stars, January 6th 2008 - this was one of my top 5 books read in 2007.

Written in the 1930's, not published until the late 1960's, a quarter-century after the author's death, this is an amazing book. Any short description I provide is necessarily reductive - it's a reworking of the Faust legend, with an embedded exploration of the story of Pontius Pilate, in which the devil and his retinue visit Stalinist Moscow. From this premise, the author produces a scathing satire of the po...more
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Adam
07/11/07

bookshelves: read-2007, surreal
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: everyone
It's the story of the devil coming to Moscow in the thirties, accompanied by a team of attendant demons who manifest themselves as a fat, petulant talking black cat, a naked enigmatic woman (with an eyepatch?), a red-headed befanged man and one other guy I can't quite remember.

Basically the devil comes to town and messes with everyone's shit by appealing to their vanity, their greed, their social aspirations and their insistence in the state-sponsored atheism of Soviet Russia. Since God and ...more
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Julia
01/26/08

Read in January, 2008
[trans. Mirra Ginsburg]

I can see why everybody gets so excited about this book, why it's innovative, why it's mind-twisting, why it's a masterpiece of protest literature, a masterpiece of symbolism, a masterpiece of...etc. But somehow, I didn't get into it the way I do into some of the staid old classics of Russian lit. (Which aren't, by the way, really staid.) I think it's one of those things that will just sit around tickling the back of my brain and having subtle effects, though. More...more
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Seabury
recommends it for: anyone
This book is utterly engrossing. It is one of those books that can be appreciated on very many levels. As I read it, I felt like I was enjoying it on a lower level, as many of the allusions and cultural referances completly slipped by me. As an adventure story, it is full of excitement. The devil is in moscow with a talking cat, several witches, and a naked vampire lady, among other escorts, and is stirring up a complete ruckus, eluding all attempts to stop him. There is also a love story mixed ...more