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Complete Works of Isaac Babel by Isaac Babel — book cover

Complete Works of Isaac Babel

by Isaac Babel, Peter Constantine
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Overview

"A celebration of literary genius framed by 20th-century tragedy."—Richard Bernstein, New York Times

Finally in paperback, this "monumental collection; gathers all of Babel's deft and brutal writing, including a wide array of previously unavailable material, from never-before-translated stories to plays and film scripts" (David Ulin, Los Angeles Times). Reviewing the work in The New Republic, James Woods wrote that this groundbreaking volume "represents a triumph of translating, editing, and publishing. Beautiful to hold, scholarly and also popularly accessible, it is an enactment of love." Considered one of the greatest writers of the twentieth century, Isaac Babel has left his mark on a generation of readers and writers. This book will stand as Babel's final, most enduring legacy. Winner of the Koret Jewish Book Award; A New York Times Notable Book, and Library Journal Best Book, a Washington Post Book World Rave, a Village Voice Favorite Book of the Year.

Synopsis

"A celebration of literary genius framed by 20th-century tragedy."—Richard Bernstein, New York Times

Lionel Trilling

A talent of great energy and boldness.

About the Author, Isaac Babel

Isaac Babel died in a Soviet gulag in 1940.

Nathalie Babel, his daughter, edited two other books of Babel's writing and is the author of Hugo and Dostoevsky.

Peter Constantine's most recent translations are Sophocles’ Theban Trilogy, The Essential Writings of Machiavelli, and The Bird is a Raven by Benjamin Lebert, which was awarded the Helen und Kurt Wolff Translation Prize. He was awarded the PEN Translation Prize for Six Early Stories by Thomas Mann, and the National Translation Award for The Undiscovered Chekhov: Thirty-Eight New Stories. His translation of the complete works of Isaac Babel received the Koret Jewish Literature Award and a National Jewish Book Award citation. He has recently translated Gogol’s Taras Bulba, Tolstoy’s The Cossacks, and Voltaire’s Candide for Modern Library. He was one of the editors for A Century of Greek Poetry: 1900-2000, and is a senior editor at Conjunctions.

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Editorials

Washington Post Book World

Here is a book that will last, that you will reread all your life and then pass on to your grandchildren.

James Salter

The Collected Works of Isaac Babel, a full presentation with useful footnotes and accompanying material, is the fulfillment of a lifetime's ambition on the part of Nathalie Babel. Surrounded by much notice, it may bring to this exceptional writer the wider readership he so greatly deserves. — Los Angeles Times

Alfred Kazin

Babel is altogether the artist, drawing the reader completely into a new view of the world. —New York Review of Books

Lionel Trilling

A talent of great energy and boldness.

Library Journal

It's all here diaries, plays, and screenplays as well as the incomparable stories that made Babel one of the great Russian writers of the 20th century. With a little help from Babel's daughter, Nathalie, and the skills of an award-winning translator, this should be great reading. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

An enormous-and enormously important-retrospective collection assembles for the first time in any language all the surviving work of the great Russian Jewish writer (1894-1941) who was murdered in a Stalinist prison camp. Babel's own terrible story is told in a moving preface and afterword contributed by this volume's editor and guiding spirit, his daughter Nathalie. Babel earned early fame for the crisp prose and blunt realism with which he depicted the misfortunes of war while serving as a correspondent and propagandist with the Red Army in Poland in the wake of the 1917 Revolution. The great works from this period include unsparingly detailed portrayals of poverty and terror on the home front as well as battlefield pieces (where Babel unwisely named names and exposed strategical blunders) both fictional and journalistic (including "Reports" from various fronts). He soon broadened his approach, with "Odessa Stories" about his birthplace and its notorious criminal underclass, and classic autobiographical tales (notably "First Love" and "The Story of My Dovecote"). The collection also includes Babel's revealing "1920 Diary" (which was not intended for publication, and in which we see his devotion to revolutionary principles begin to crumble); two complete plays (the better, "Sunset," is a virtuosic distillation of his Odessa tales); and nearly 200 pages' worth of screenplays written for silent film director Sergei Eisenstein. Reading Babel, one is reminded at various times of the young Tolstoy, Maupassant, Chekhov, Stephen Crane, and Sholom Aleichem (several of whose works he in fact adapted for the screen). Still, he's a writer ultimately unlike any other: a chronicler of theextremes to which human beings subject one another, whose clarity and precision give his harsh fiction an intensely lyrical and visual luminosity. Every great writer deserves a tribute like this magnificent gathering. Nathalie Babel has honored her father's memory and given readers a book to be endlessly reread, and treasured.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2005
Publisher
Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Pages
1072
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780393328240

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