Andrei Sinyavsky wrote In Gogol's Shadow while serving time in a
Soviet labor camp. Opening with Gogol's funeral, this unorthodox
biography strips the man away from the myth. Sinyavsky challenges the
deeply held Russian and Soviet view--promoted by Gogol--that Gogol was
first and foremost a political writer, whose biting satire was part of a
quest for his country's salvation. In Gogol's Shadow reveals a writer
more obsessed with language than with politics. Gogol's attempt to force
his art neatly into the function of exposing social ills is undermined
by his uncanny imagination and inventiveness. Over the course of his
investigation, Sinyavsky's own style comes to recall the digressive,
free-flowing prose of the author of Dead Souls and The Government
Inspector. This irreverent and incisive analysis of Gogol's life and
work is a path-breaking exploration of literary creativity in times of
strict censorship and ideological control.