The Matiushin Case is one of the darkest and most powerful works of fiction to appear in Russian in the last twenty years. Deriving, like Captain of the Steppe (2013, And Other Stories), from Oleg Pavlov's own traumatic experience as a conscript in the last years of the Soviet Union, it follows the ordeals of Matiushin, a sensitive, disoriented young man, damaged by brutality first within his family and then in the army. Indebted to the 'labour camp writing' traditions pioneered by Solzhenitsyn and Shalamov, the novel is much more than an exposé of society's ills. Its greatest achievement lies in the tension between the horrific realities of conscript life and the uniquely dreamlike, timeless style through which Pavlov portrays them. Matiushin's 'crime and punishment' emerge from this tension with compelling inevitability; the victim turns killer. The hell that Pavlov describes is real and societal, but above all psychological, and, as such, no less universal than that described by Dante or Dostoevsky.
- Indie Author Project Collection
- Newest Ebooks
- Always Available Classics
- Available now
- English Language Reference
- Stop the Spread
- Newly Added Mystery
- From the Page to the Screen
- Staff Favorites
- Read a Classic
- Fantastic Beasts & How We Love Them
- Joke's on You
- Who Runs the World?: Women's History
- See all
- Listen again! - Time Capsule: 2022
- Listen While You Travel
- Most popular
- Spooky Sounds
- Listen to Some Love
- Give a Listen: Social Justice Audiobooks
- eAudiobooks from Recorded Books!
- Listen to a Classic
- Newest Audiobooks
- Listen to a Biography
- Available now
- Page to Screen: Audiobooks
- Try something different
- See all