Unwitting Street (New York Review Books Classics) Summary and Reviews

Unwitting Street (New York Review Books Classics) by Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky

Unwitting Street (New York Review Books Classics)

by Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky

  • Published:
  • Aug 2020, 192 pages
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About this book

Book Summary

Eighteen strange, whimsical, and philosophical tales by the Russian master of the weird, all now in English for the very first time.

When Comrade Punt does not wake up one Moscow morning--he has died--his pants dash off to work without him. The ambitious pants soon have their own office and secretary. So begins the first of eighteen superb examples of Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky's philosophical and phantasmagorical stories. Where the stories included in two earlier NYRB collections (Memories of the Future and Autobiography of a Corpse) are denser and darker, the creations in Unwitting Street are on the lighter side: an ancient goblet brimful of self-replenishing wine drives its owner into the drink; a hypnotist's attempt to turn a fly into an elephant backfires; a philosopher's free-floating thought struggles against being "enlettered" in type and entombed in a book; the soul of a politician turned chess master winds up in one of his pawns; an unsentimental parrot journeys from prewar Austria to Soviet Russia.

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Reviews

Media Reviews

"These philosophical, melancholic, darkly funny tales merit a place beside those of Kafka, Borges, and Calvino." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"This collection ... mixes playful and morose tones in stories of the kooky and the condemned ... clever and satirical in his descriptions, Krzhizhanovsky is at his best when finding levity in grave revelations." —Publishers Weekly

This information about Unwitting Street (New York Review Books Classics) was first featured in "The BookBrowse Review" - BookBrowse's membership magazine, and in our weekly "Publishing This Week" newsletter. Publication information is for the USA, and (unless stated otherwise) represents the first print edition. The reviews are necessarily limited to those that were available to us ahead of publication. If you are the publisher or author and feel that they do not properly reflect the range of media opinion now available, send us a message with the mainstream reviews that you would like to see added.

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More Information

Sigizmund Krzizhanovsky (1887-1950) studied law and classical philology at Kiev University. In his philosophical and satirical stories with fantastical plots, he ignored official injunctions to portray the new Soviet state in a positive light, and three separate efforts to print different collections were quashed by the censors, a fourth by World War II. Two of his short story collections, Autobiography of a Corpse and Memories of the Future, and his novels The Letter Killers Club and The Return of Munchhausen are also available as NYRB Classics.

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