Nikolai Gogol's Dead Souls is the great comic masterpiece of Russian
literature-a satirical and splendidly exaggerated epic of life in the
benighted provinces.
Gogol hoped to show the world "the untold riches of the Russian soul" in
this 1842 novel, which he populated with a Dickensian swarm of
characters: rogues and scoundrels, landowners and serfs, conniving petty
officials-all of them both utterly lifelike and alarmingly larger than
life. Setting everything in motion is the wily antihero, Chichikov, the
trafficker in "dead souls"-deceased serfs who still represent profit to
those clever enough to trade in them.
This lively, idiomatic English version by the award-winning translators
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky makes accessible the full extent
of the novel's lyricism, sulphurous humor, and delight in human oddity
and error.