Book description
The Plummeting Old Women by Daniil Kharms is a collection of
stories, incidents, dialogues and fragments that forms an important
part of the buried literature of Russian modernism now revealed under
glasnost. These texts are characterized by a startling and macabre
novelty, with elements of the grotesque, fantastic and child-like
touching the imagination of the everyday. They express the cultural
landscape of Stalinism -- years of show trials, mass atrocities and
stifled political life. Their painful, unsettling eloquence testify to
the humane and the comic in this absurdist writer's work. The
translator Neil Cornwall gives a biographical introduction to his
subject, enlarged upon by the poet Hugh Maxton in a contextual
assessment of the writing of Flann O'Brien, Le Fanu and Doyle, and of
their shared concerns with detective fiction, terror and death. Daniil
Kharms 91905-42) died under Stalin. Along with fellow poets and
prose-writers of the era -- Khlebnikov, Biely, Mandelstam, Zabolotsky
and Pasternak -- he is one of the emerging experimentalists of Russian modernism.