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Dead Souls
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Dead Souls
By None
Current price: $0.99

Coles
Dead Souls
By None
Current price: $0.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol is a brilliant and biting сатirical masterpiece that exposes the moral decay, vanity, and absurdity of provincial society in 19th-century Russia. Blending dark humor with sharp social commentary, Gogol crafts a richly layered narrative that remains one of the most important works in Russian literature. The novel follows the mysterious and calculating Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov, a seemingly polite and unremarkable gentleman who travels from town to town with a peculiar scheme. He seeks to purchase the legal rights to deceased serfs—"souls" who have died but are still listed on official census records—at bargain prices. By acquiring these "dead souls," Chichikov hopes to inflate his social and financial standing through bureaucratic loopholes. What begins as a strange business venture gradually unfolds into a sweeping portrait of greed, corruption, and moral emptiness. As Chichikov encounters a colorful array of landowners—each embodying different shades of folly, laziness, arrogance, or delusion—Gogol paints a vivid and often hilarious panorama of human weakness. From miserly recluses to boastful dreamers, the characters are exaggerated yet deeply recognizable, serving as both individuals and symbolic reflections of societal flaws. Beneath the comedy lies a profound critique of a system driven by status, materialism, and hollow ambition. Gogol's prose moves effortlessly between realism and absurdity, capturing the rhythms of everyday life while elevating the narrative into something almost mythic. His sharp eye for detail and his gift for caricature create scenes that are as entertaining as they are unsettling. At its core, Dead Souls is not merely a satire of a particular time and place—it is a timeless exploration of spiritual emptiness and the pursuit of meaning in a world governed by appearances. Widely regarded as one of the foundational works of Russian fiction, Dead Souls influenced generations of writers, including Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. Bold, humorous, and deeply philosophical, this novel stands as Gogol's enduring testament to the power of literature to reveal both the ridiculous and the tragic dimensions of the human condition.
Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol is a brilliant and biting сатirical masterpiece that exposes the moral decay, vanity, and absurdity of provincial society in 19th-century Russia. Blending dark humor with sharp social commentary, Gogol crafts a richly layered narrative that remains one of the most important works in Russian literature. The novel follows the mysterious and calculating Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov, a seemingly polite and unremarkable gentleman who travels from town to town with a peculiar scheme. He seeks to purchase the legal rights to deceased serfs—"souls" who have died but are still listed on official census records—at bargain prices. By acquiring these "dead souls," Chichikov hopes to inflate his social and financial standing through bureaucratic loopholes. What begins as a strange business venture gradually unfolds into a sweeping portrait of greed, corruption, and moral emptiness. As Chichikov encounters a colorful array of landowners—each embodying different shades of folly, laziness, arrogance, or delusion—Gogol paints a vivid and often hilarious panorama of human weakness. From miserly recluses to boastful dreamers, the characters are exaggerated yet deeply recognizable, serving as both individuals and symbolic reflections of societal flaws. Beneath the comedy lies a profound critique of a system driven by status, materialism, and hollow ambition. Gogol's prose moves effortlessly between realism and absurdity, capturing the rhythms of everyday life while elevating the narrative into something almost mythic. His sharp eye for detail and his gift for caricature create scenes that are as entertaining as they are unsettling. At its core, Dead Souls is not merely a satire of a particular time and place—it is a timeless exploration of spiritual emptiness and the pursuit of meaning in a world governed by appearances. Widely regarded as one of the foundational works of Russian fiction, Dead Souls influenced generations of writers, including Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. Bold, humorous, and deeply philosophical, this novel stands as Gogol's enduring testament to the power of literature to reveal both the ridiculous and the tragic dimensions of the human condition.




















