Best russian literature books according to redditors

We found 64 Reddit comments discussing the best russian literature books. We ranked the 14 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top Reddit comments about Russian Literature:

u/Vitols666 · 15 pointsr/LatvianJokes

Few books:

Nora Ikstena - "Soviet Milk", "Life Stories"

Janis Jonevs - "Doom 94"

Andrejs Pumpurs -"Bearslayer"

Rainis - "The Glass Mountain"

Mara Zalite - "Five Fingers"

Aleksandrs Caks - "Between Two Rains"

u/angelenoatheart · 8 pointsr/museum

Pretty sure I've seen this used as the cover for Anna Karenina. [ETA: indeed]

u/lmhtg · 5 pointsr/books

Pevear and Volokhonsky are really excellent translators of Russian Lit.

I read their's, and it was excellent.

Try to avoid Constance Garnett.

u/bearattack · 3 pointsr/booksuggestions

I highly recommend any collections illustrated by Ivan Bilibin, like this Russian Fairy Tales. The stories are pretty well-known, so it should give you the introduction you're looking for, plus the art is really magnificent. There are also collections like this that have a ton of stories in them. If you want some sort of history/analysis/criticism to go with it, you could take a look at this one about the Russian folktale or this one about Baba Yaga specifically.

u/madducks · 3 pointsr/drunk

Unrelated: Have you read Moscow to the End of the Line? It's awesome. Let me know if you haven't, I will find a way to get you a copy, seriously.

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/books

Here's some 20th century stuff:

Moscow to the End of the Line - Venedict Erofeev. This book certainly ranks up there with Chekhov and Gogol.

Life of Insects by Vladimir Pelevin.

Queue by Vladimir Sorokin.

Absurdist Stories by by Daniil Kharms and Alexander Vvedensky.

u/Pikkutarkkaa · 2 pointsr/AskWomen

War and Peace in Russian. It's slow going. I haven't studied it since high school. I am only in Book III so far.

u/eduard93 · 2 pointsr/booksuggestions

Moscow-Petushki, also published as Moscow to the End of the Line, Moscow Stations, and Moscow Circles, is a pseudo-autobiographical postmodernist prose poem by Russian writer and satirist Venedikt Yerofeyev. The story follows an alcoholic intellectual, Venya (or Venichka), as he travels by a suburban train on a 125 km (78 mi) journey from Moscow to visit his beautiful beloved and his child in Petushki, a town that is described by the narrator in almost utopian terms. At the start of the story, he has just been fired from his job as foreman of a telephone cable-laying crew for drawing charts of the amount of alcohol he and his colleagues were consuming over time.

Buy it on Amazon, for Kindle.

It's very funny.

u/amazon-converter-bot · 1 pointr/FreeEBOOKS

Here are all the local Amazon links I could find:


amazon.com

amazon.co.uk

amazon.ca

amazon.com.au

amazon.in

amazon.com.mx

amazon.de

amazon.it

amazon.es

amazon.com.br

amazon.nl

amazon.co.jp

amazon.fr

Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, amazon.de, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.com.br, amazon.nl, amazon.co.jp, amazon.fr, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/MaryOutside · 1 pointr/books

The Foundation Pit is great. I know it's not a short story, but I'm excited you mention Platanov.

u/girlprotagonist · 1 pointr/AskReddit

Snow Crash! Keywords: ninja, cyberpunk, hackers, augmented reality, linguistics, religion, malignant memes, corporate-run America

Also, Petersburg, by Bely. Ulysses + Metamorphosis + House of Leaves?

u/treerex · 1 pointr/books

Pevear and Volokhonsky just edges out Burgin and Tiernan O'Connor for readability. The latter is great, and has a lot of good footnotes and commentary, but P&V is my preference.

As far as I know they are the only two English translations that include the complete text of the novel: Ginsburg and Glenny each used the older version of Bulgakov's text. Of those two, Glenny is significantly better than Ginsburg.

u/dmstewar2 · 1 pointr/russian

Lingvist has a very good vocabulary app.

Bondar's Simplified Russian Method is the best textbook to get you reading quickly. It was printed by Middlebury College in 1949 and was used by the CIA and DOD. It's a funky way to learn while still being grammatically accurate, even if it uses words like гражданин/гражданка and перо.) Each chapter is between 3-10 pages.

Unlike новая искра! It doesn't waste your time with endless pictures of people saying "Hello, Mr. Smith, how are you" "Good, thank you" "Are you a teacher" "Yes, I am a Russian teacher." etc.
It's all about increasing vocab, methodically teaching grammar and getting used to reading long-ish passages.

You can get a reprint for $35 on Amazon.

https://www.amazon.com/Bondars-Simplified-Russian-Method-English/dp/054844630X

u/bigomess · 1 pointr/suggestmeabook

Try the Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky translation.

While I haven't read their translation of this book, I've read other books they've translated and I haven't been disappointed yet.