Yuri Dombrovsky (1909-1978) wrote his main novel "The Faculty of Useless Knowledge" for more than ten years, not hoping for publication in the USSR. The book was first published by a Parisian publisher in 1978, and the author even managed to hold it in his hands. The publication in his homeland took place much later.
"The Faculty" completes a sort of duology that began with "The Keeper of Antiquities," in which the main character is the same - Zybin, a man devoted to culture and an inseparable part of it. This is a parable novel about a traitor, a victim, and an executioner, about how these concepts are closely and tragically intertwined in our country. Zybin is arrested (anti-Soviet propaganda, escape abroad, theft of gold), but still remains a victor. Unbroken. Just like the author of the novel.
Domestic and foreign critics placed "The Faculty of Useless Things" on par with M. Bulgakov's "The Master and Margarita" and B. Pasternak's "Doctor Zhivago."
And you know what I just remembered? Lessing wrote somewhere that a martyr is the least dramatic figure in the world. You can't write about him and tragedy. He has no actions, no hesitations, no experiences - only patience. They torment him, and he endures; they tempt him, and he prays.
…After martyrs, executioners always follow.
AST
The Faculty of Useless Knowledge (Fakultet nenuzhnykh veshchey)
£26.00
Description
Specification
Publisher: AST
Weight: 763
Age restrictions: 18+
Author: Yuriy Dombrovskiy
Circulation: 1500
Size: 3.3x14.5x22
Book series: Yury Dombrovsky: prose
Cover: Hardcover
Language: Russian
Pages: 672
Illustrator: Bondarenko Andrey Leonidovich
Publication year: 2025
ISBN: 978-5-17-158814-4
ISBN (Barcode): 9785171588144
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