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Russian Library

Fandango and Other Stories

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In a bucolic idyll, a terrorist agonizes over the act of violence he is about to commit. On a remote island in the South Pacific, the investigation of a case of mass suicide reveals further mysteries. In a far-flung colony, a cynical trio sends an unwitting man into the wilderness in search of a chimera. Mixing romance and high adventure, intrigue and the fantastic, these magnificent tales by one of Russia's most enduringly popular writers deftly probe the depths of human nature and desire.

Fandango and Other Stories presents a selection of essential short fiction by Alexander Grin, Russia's counterpart to Robert Louis Stevenson, Edgar Allan Poe, and Alexandre Dumas. By turns a sailor, a dockworker, a vagrant, a gold prospector, a lumberjack, a soldier, a deserter, an agitator, an exile, a prisoner, and a runaway, Grin wrote seven novels and over three hundred short stories that transport the reader to a realm of pure art and imagination. His ingenious plots explore conflicts of the individual and society in a romantic world populated by a cast of eccentric, cosmopolitan characters. Fandango and Other Stories presents works drawn from across the entirety of Grin's varied career to encompass the range and sophistication of his writing. Bryan Karetnyk's elegant translations bring Grin's distinctive voice to a new generation of readers.

336 pages, Hardcover

Published January 7, 2020

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About the author

Alexander Grin

401 books85 followers
Alexander Grin or Green is the pen name of Aleksandr Stepanovich Grinevskiĭ (Russian: Александр Степанович Грин (настоящее имя — Алексaндр Степaнович Гринeвский)), August 23, 1880 – July 8, 1932) , a Russian writer, notable for his romantic novels and short stories, mostly set in an unnamed fantasy land with a European or Latin American flavor. He was a sailor, gold miner and construction worker, but generally lived a life of a vagabond.

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Ends of the Word.
550 reviews143 followers
March 24, 2025
Russian author Aleksandr Stepanovich Grinevsky (1880 – 1932) better known by his pen-name Alexander Grin, was born in Vyatka of an exiled Polish family. In his youth he was a sailor, gold-miner, construction worker, soldier and even, during a short stint as member of the Socialist-Revolutionary party, a would-be terrorist. These formative experiences provided plenty of raw material when he eventually gravitated towards literature. Grin churned out stories at an incredible – if not downright alarming rate – in 1915 alone, he wrote more than 100 short stories and poems. By the mid-1920’s, he had built a fairly solid reputation. However, he eventually lost favour with the Soviet regime and, whilst he did not suffer any direct persecution, the authorities’ dismissal of his work as “not needed” led to a marked decline in his fortunes and health. Following the Second World War, Grin’s writings underwent a reassessment and 1965 saw the publication of a six-volume collection of Grin’s works. In Russia, Grin is now considered a key author of the early 20th Century – his fairy-tale novella Scarlet Sails, in particular, is much-loved and has inspired film, opera and ballet, as well as lending its name to an all-night festival in St. Petersburg celebrating the end of the scholastic year.

It is fair to say, however, that, in comparison, Grin remains a little-known figure in the English-speaking world. Hopefully, he will get a wider readership, thanks to this selection of short stories, newly-translated by Bryan Karetnyk and published by Columbia University Press as part of their “Russian Library” series.

As far as the style and content of his stories are concerned, Grin has been said to be reminiscent of Edgar Allan Poe, Robert Louis Stevenson, Alexandre Dumas and Franz Kafka. In his introduction to the collection, Barry P. Scherr explains that the influences on Grin, whether as declared by himself or as stated by others, include not only these mentioned authors, but also Rudyard Kipling, James Fenimore Cooper, Jules Verne and Mayne Reid. This roll-call of potential influences is significant. It shows, first of all, that Grin was at odds with the Russian tradition, and closer to foreign authors, especially those writing in English. During his lifetime, this gave rise to a strange rumour about Grin – namely that during his sailing years he had killed an English sea captain and stolen a suitcase full of manuscripts, eventually translating them into Russian and passing them off as his own. Grin’s “foreignness” also contributed to his ostracization by the Soviet regime. In this regard, Barry P. Scherr further observes that Grin often employs convoluted syntax, as well as phrasing and similes which, in the original Russian, sound unusual and odd. Karetnyk’s translation brings out Grin’s style, yet remains readable throughout – even as plots get denser and more fantastic.

The difficulty to compare Grin to one or more specific authors, however, also reveals how protean a writer he could be, a fact which is borne out by the selection of eight stories in his volume, chosen from various stages in the author’s career. The chief common element in the featured pieces is the (very Romantic) presence of a male narrator or protagonist, who is generally facing some sort of physical or psychological struggle against which he must prove himself. Apart from this basic similarity, the stories are very different from each other. Quarantine, the earliest piece, has an autobiographical element, in that it presents us with a revolutionary who is having second thoughts about an assignment he has been given. “She” features another troubled male protagonist obsessed by the image of a woman – it is one of Grin’s first stories to reveal the influence of Poe.

Many of Grin’s later works are based in an exotic setting, which his fans fondly refer to as “Grinlandia”. Recalling the tropical backdrop of 19th century adventure stories, Grin’s made-up world seems strangely unrelated to any real geographical place. His made-up territory is generally populated by European emigrés and adventurers, usually with English, French, Spanish or strange-sounding names.

The first Grin work set in “Grinlandia” is “Reno Island”, from 1909. Karetnyk, however, opts instead for Lanphier Colony, published only a few months afterwards, and possibly a more typical example of Grin’s adventure stories. The hero here is one “Horn” who, hurt in love like the protagonist of “She”, tries to set up an ideal settlement on a remote island – with tragic consequences. There is a similar concept in The Heart of the Wilderness, although the mood of this latter story is lighter and its outlook more optimistic.

The Devil of the Orange Waters is another “Grinlandia” work – a psychological study of a Russian political exile whose experiences fill him with despair and antipathy to life.

Grin seems to purposely avoid reference to topical political events. The Poisoned Island is a notable exception, despite its exotic setting. It takes the form of an inquiry into what appears to be a mysterious mass suicide on a tropical island. There is a suggestion that this was a case of collective hysteria provoked by news of world conflagrations.

The final two stories in the collection abandon Grinlandia, being set in Petrograd and inspired specifically by the author’s experiences living at the House of Arts, an institution for artists established by Maxim Gorky. Ironically, despite their ‘realistic’ setting, these are also amongst the more fantastical of Grin’s tales, and could easily be classified as examples of “weird fiction”. The main character in The Rat-Catcher, who is recovering from typhus and has no fixed abode, is offered accommodation in a huge abandoned building in Petrograd. As night approaches, the protagonist realizes that the building is haunted by mysterious figures who seem to be plotting the murder of the eponymous Rat-Catcher. There follows a nightmarish adventure in the labyrinthine building, which can be either taken at face-value as a supernatural experience, or simply a hallucination provoked by the narrator’s fever and hunger. If I dare add another potential “parallel”, I would say that Grin’s brand of the unheimlich recalls some of the tales of E.T.A. Hoffmann.

Fandango – the title piece – also combines an actual setting (post-Revolution Petrograd) with extraordinary happenings, giving it a tinge of magical realism. Yet, its mood is markedly different from that of The Rat-Catcher. A contingent of Spanish-speaking visitors to the House of Arts, led by the mysterious Bam-Gran, appoints the narrator as an interpreter. A strange series of events transports the narrator to the Grinlandian city of Zurbagan which, in contrast with the bleakness of Petrograd, glows with Mediterranean passion, as represented by melody and dance-rhythms and melodies of the Iberian “fandango”. Perhaps herein lies the key to Grin’s work – it is “escapist fiction” in the best sense of the word, a transformative experience which, at least temporarily, carries us away from the everyday to a more colourful world.

For a full, illustrated review accompanied by a selection of examples of the "fandango" in classical music, visit https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/20...
Profile Image for Kuszma.
2,873 reviews294 followers
December 1, 2019
Az én ’77-es irodalmi lexikonom azt mondja Grinről, hogy művein átüt a forradalom utáni évek lelkesedése – hát lótúrót, azt. Kezdjük ott, hogy a húszas-harmincas éveket (haláláig) azzal töltötte, hogy alkalmi munkák után talpalt, és gyakran éhezett is – egy ilyen embertől lelkesedést várni kábé annyira életszerű, mint egy államtitkár, aki egyben keményen dolgozó kisember is. Az egész grin-i életmű az elvágyódásról szól, könyveit benépesítik az egzotikus, délszaki figurák, tengerjárók, kalandorok, csupa olyan személy, aki Szovjetoroszországban egész egyszerűen nem fordulhatna elő. Kevés olyan írót ismerek, aki nagyobb hiábavaló vágyakozást jelenítene meg műveiben, mint ő.

És ugyanakkor kevés olyan írót ismerek, aki vonzóbb életművet hagyott volna hátra – ami azzal együtt bámulatra méltó, hogy közben iszonyatosan egyenetlen is. Ez a kötet kiváló példa rá. Az első történet, a Fandango az egyik legfinomabb, legérzékenyebb látlelet az orosz húszas évekről, pedig a történelmi hátteret jobbára csak sejteti. Grin egy csodás kontraszttal játszik: egyik oldalon ott van a szürke, jéghideg szovjet valóság a élelmiszerjegyekkel, a puskalövésekkel, a káosszal, a másik oldalon pedig a meleg mediterrán napsütés, a varázslat, és a spanyol dallam, a Fandango vissza-visszatérő taktusai – a képzelt világ, ami után elbeszélőnk vágyakozik. Bravúros megoldás, nabokovi ihletettségű mondatok, csillagos ötös. Az utolsó kisregény, a Hincs kalandjai egyetlen zaklatott monológ Lebegyev tollából, aki kölcsönkap egy pokolgépet, és ezzel elkezdődnek hányattatásai. Kiváló, lüktető, látomásos próza, ez is legyen öt csillag. Csak sajna a kettő között ott van a Jessy és Morghiana, ami kiváló példa arra, milyen gyengén is tud írni Grin, ha a mondatait nem tölti meg a személyes élmény mágiájával. A végtelenül bő lére eresztett történet középpontjában egy testvérpár gyűlölködése áll – az alapötlet még megjárja, de az egész olyan giccses, olyan kiszámítható, mint valami rossz lektűr. (Illetve lektűrnek nem olyan rossz, de Grin ne írjon lektűrt, ha tud mást is.). Különösen bántó így, hogy két kiváló írás közé van bepasszintva. Mondjuk három csillag, jóindulattal. Kétszer öt, meg három, osztva hárommal az 4,33333. De ennyi csillag nincs.
Profile Image for Translator Monkey.
761 reviews23 followers
December 17, 2019
I appreciate the work that Grin put into his writing; this is not trivial stuff - every sentence from Grin's hand could read like a poem. Wonderful stuff; I'm just not a fan of the plotting (or as I refer to it, plodding) - sometimes glacial, but never agonizingly so. I suppose his work is like being served a magnificent-looking eight course meal, with every plate looking more sumptuous than the rest, but the ordering, the wait, and the presentation take longer than the taste inevitably reveals itself to be. I cannot fault the author - it is his style, and it simply isn't for me.

Why four stars? I have read good and bad translations of every Russian author, Grin included. Translation and literary translation are not the same animal, and when you come across a noteworthy literary translator, it is always worth bring his or her name to the fore. Bryan Karetnyk did a superb job handling Grin's sometimes challenging writing as the translator of this collection. Easily worth an additional star to top the three-star performance of the Grin short stories.
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,633 reviews334 followers
June 16, 2020
Although I was delighted to discover another Russian author, these stories are just not for me. Alexander Grin (1880-1932) wrote 6 novels and many short stories, and is perhaps most famous for his iconic novel Scarlet Sails, a fairy tale that has been adapted into a film, an opera and a ballet. But he is little known in the west and now thanks to Columbia University Press this collection, expertly translated, is now available to an English-speaking readership. There are 8 stories here, mainly fantasies and all rather strange, it has to be admitted. Grin has sometimes been compared to Edgar Allan Poe, but for my money Poe’s stories are much more comprehensible. The stories collected here are from various stages of Grin’s career, but all have similar themes and atmosphere, even though the subject of each is very different. But they are just the sort of stories I don’t enjoy, too weird and hallucinatory, although as an avid reader of Russian literature I’m very happy to have tackled them.
Profile Image for Mallory (onmalsshelf) Bartel .
971 reviews94 followers
May 22, 2020
3 stars:
This combined work of short stories is truly some of the most descriptive literature I have ever read. I haven't read very many translated works, but I'm very glad that I picked this one up. The writing read almost like poetry and the translator did a marvelous job translating Grin's work.

By far, I recommend reading Fandango and Other Stories when you do not have anything pulling your attention away. It was hard for me to figure out where each short story was taking place as the setting was not always described in full detail. Even being pulled away for a quick second shook my focus and I could no longer place the setting of the stories.

I recommend this collection of short stories to anyone looking for a collection of Russian literature, which is by far a translated work that I see people reading these days. Especially when Alexander Grin's work was not admired until after his death.
Profile Image for Michael Samerdyke.
Author 63 books21 followers
July 31, 2025
A frustrating read. Some stories were very good. Some I didn't bother to finish.

I had never read Grin before. I didn't really know much about his reputation, other than he was an "adventure writer."

I ended up really liking his adventure stories, which are not set in Russia but in a South Seas milieu. "Devil of the Orange Waters," "The Poisoned Island," "Heart of the Wilderness" and "Lanphier Colony" were all compelling, thoughtful, and even moving tales.

I also liked "She," which was about an early encounter with cinema.

The other three stories were simply inert. I could not really find myself caring about anything in the first story in the book, and the last two stories in the book lost my interest before they ended.
9,137 reviews130 followers
September 11, 2019
A disappointing collection of Russian/Soviet short stories, ranging from a few years before the Revolution to the same afterwards. The first piece didn't do a heck of a lot – a lad finds a new source of life when he lives with a rural family that includes a young daughter. It's more or less obvious what the plot will entail when you quickly work out why he's there. Next long piece I gave up on for going nowhere fast. The one in between restored some kind of faith, with its exploration of (generally) unrequited love, and I found an unusual look at the call of the wild with the other short short work. Unusual is the word for a sort of 'Conrad gone wrong', as an idyllic island in the middle of nowhere is found to have borne a nasty event. I then went to even more remote places with the title story, but in going everywhere in a fantasia it went nowhere quite incoherently, and didn't satisfy – and neither did a trek with the devil. Finally I had a bizarre fever dream, that again showed the merits of this author do have a strong chance of escaping the average reader I would claim to be. For all the talk of snappy, genre influences (Poe, Verne et al) he can appear quite laboured in his efforts, and what he is saying in his literature can be lost to the layman through the mists of time. The book is as usual wonderfully introduced and presented; a given with these publishers.
Profile Image for Keith.
172 reviews1 follower
April 28, 2025
Finished FANDANGO & OTHER STORIES by Alexander Grin. Writes one online reviewer, "One has to be pretty dedicated to Russian literature to run across Alexander Grin (1880-1932)."
I'll take that as a compliment, I think.
"Nor, if this newly translated collection of (long) short stories is any indication, once one has found him, does Grin fit any expected mold."
True. Some stories reminded me of American pulp westerns, and others of Latin American magic realism.
1,831 reviews21 followers
September 5, 2019
This is excellent literature. I was bit hesitant to tackle what I thought would be stories with complicated names and plots, but I was pleasantly surprised. Grin was an excellent writer. His prose flows very well and his talent shine through on every page. Really enjoyed this collection. 4.5 stars.

I really appreciate the advanced copy for review!!
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