Back to Search

Polnoe sobranie stihotvorenij

AUTHOR Tsvetaeva, Marina
PUBLISHER Book on Demand Ltd. (01/07/2013)
PRODUCT TYPE Paperback (Paperback)

Description
Marina Tsvetaeva odnazhdy sravnila sebya s derevom, v kotoroe popadayut vse molnii. Mnogoletnyaya razluka s Rossiej, bednost' i tyazhkij "stopudovyj byt". Odinochestvo - chto v emigratsii, chto "doma", kuda po tragicheskomu stecheniyu obstoyatel'stv ej vypalo vernut'sya v epohu "bol'shogo terrora" i perezhit' arest muzha i docheri, kotoryh ona bol'she nikogda ne uvidela. No nesmotrya na vse perezhitoe, stihi Tsvetaevoj, po slovam odnogo kritika, "izluchayut lyubov' i lyubov'yu pronizany... rvutsya k miru i kak by pytayutsya zaklyuchit' ves' mir v ob'yat'ya "., Tak osuschestvilas' ee mechta - stat' derevom, shumyaschim vam navstrechu.
Show More
Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9785424124907
ISBN-10: 5424124909
Binding: Paperback or Softback (Trade Paperback (Us))
Content Language: Russian
More Product Details
Page Count: 644
Carton Quantity: 14
Product Dimensions: 5.83 x 1.30 x 8.27 inches
Weight: 1.67 pound(s)
Country of Origin: US
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
Marina Tsvetaeva odnazhdy sravnila sebya s derevom, v kotoroe popadayut vse molnii. Mnogoletnyaya razluka s Rossiej, bednost' i tyazhkij "stopudovyj byt". Odinochestvo - chto v emigratsii, chto "doma", kuda po tragicheskomu stecheniyu obstoyatel'stv ej vypalo vernut'sya v epohu "bol'shogo terrora" i perezhit' arest muzha i docheri, kotoryh ona bol'she nikogda ne uvidela. No nesmotrya na vse perezhitoe, stihi Tsvetaevoj, po slovam odnogo kritika, "izluchayut lyubov' i lyubov'yu pronizany... rvutsya k miru i kak by pytayutsya zaklyuchit' ves' mir v ob'yat'ya "., Tak osuschestvilas' ee mechta - stat' derevom, shumyaschim vam navstrechu.
Show More

Author: Tsvetaeva, Marina
Marina Tsvetaeva was born in Moscow in 1892. Her first volume of poetry was published in 1910 and attracted notice from some of the most important critics and poets in Russia, including Maximilian Voloshin. In 1922, following the Russian Civil War, she went into exile in Paris, where she became one of the leading writers of the emigre community. In 1939, she returned to the Soviet Union, and her husband was arrested shortly thereafter and subsequently executed by the NKVD. Tsvetaeva committed suicide in Elabuga, a small town to which she had been evacuated following the onset of World War II, in 1941.
Show More
Your Price  $35.57
Paperback