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Блуждающее время

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В новом романе знаменитого писателя речь идет об экзотических поисках современной московской интеллигенции, то переносящейся в прошлое, то обретающей мистический «За-смертный» покой.

В книге сохранены особенности авторской орфографии, пунктуациии фирменного мамлеевского стиля.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2001

22 people want to read

About the author

Yuriy Mamleev

39 books41 followers
Born in 1931 in Moscow, Yuri Mamleyev began writing in the 1960s. During that time, the author led a “double life.” By day, he taught mathematics, but in the evenings he hosted a secret circle of intellectuals. Discussing Indian and German philosophy, theosophy and psychoanalysis, the members of this undercover literary and philosophical circle called themselves “sexual mystics.”

Mamleyev’s works could only be sold in Russia through Samizdat and in the 1980s began to appear in the West. In 1974, Mamleyev emigrated to the U.S., and later lived in Paris. He returned to Russia in 1993 and, today, alternates between Moscow and Paris. Younger Moscow writers such as Vladimir Sorokin or Victor Yerofeyev venerate him as “the heir to both Gogol and Dostoyevsky.”

In 2000, Mamleyev was awarded the Pushkin Prize by the Alfred Toepfe Foundation and the International PEN Club, and he was a scholar at the German Foundation, Preußische Seehandlung.

Mamleyev is considered the “most Russian” writer in Russia today. He founded a new literary current called “metaphysical realism.” Vladimir Spakov wrote of Mamleyev in The Petersburg Book Journal:

“His prose is devoid of actual events… but it holds something else instead: an eternal thing that has forever been part of man, but which nobody likes to be confronted with. The mirror he holds up to us has turned black, reflecting our dark side. To do so, it needed a writer capable of standing at the abyss without falling and of telling the more frightful among us who pretend to be ‘civilized': There are monsters hiding in you!”

Mamleyev’s heroes are often characterized as “idiots”, “feeble-minded”, or “dopes” – but in fact they are all in love with being and dream of immortality. They want to understand the incomprehensible, and find answers to questions beyond the realm of human reason. They have entered a prohibited area. While Mamleyev’s figures seem to emerge from a grotesque and evil fairy tale, he places them into a realistic context. And that is why his prose is both unbelievably credible and merciless.

From: http://www.hauteculturebooks.com/yuri...

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30 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2022
Сочетание Булгакова, Пелевина, Платонова - и всё как-то сумбурно, как-то мимо, с какой-то завистью к оригинальным текстам. Стиль и подача при этом сохраняет в напряжении.
701 reviews16 followers
September 5, 2014
Дорогие авторы и издатели, ну пишите где-то в описании книги "эзотерика", чтобы те, кто не дорос до высот философской мысли, которой достигли индийские мыслители и их почитатели в России, не тратили время.

Я без иронии - у меня нет предубеждений против людей, которых искренне увлекают подобные книги. Но нельзя игнорировать и тот факт, что большинству людей такая литература не интересна.

Надо быть очень ограниченным человеком, чтобы вести споры, кто из этих категорий людей более прав. Но надо же более явно говорить о том, что книга рассчитана на эту, не самую большую, категорию читателей.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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