An absorbing portrait of an extraordinary man, an analysis of the work
of a great Russian poet, and the evocation of a crucial period in
Russian cultural history--all are combined in Edward J. Brown's literary
biography of Vladimir Mayakovsky. It is the only book to reveal the
whole Mayakovsky, not just aspects of his tortured personality or
artistic work, and will be immediately recognized as definitive.
Mayakovsky contributed to the cultural life of Soviet Russia not only as
a lyric poet but as a playwright, graphic artist, and satirist of the
conventional art forms of his day. By examining his art in terms of his
life, Edward Brown shows how intensely personal it was and how bound up
in the literary and political history of his time. The intellectual
turmoil of the period is skillfully re-created, especially the nature,
ambience, and personalities of Russian futurism. Above all, the book
reveals the man--a committed Bolshevik and a dedicated artist, but also
a hypochondriac, compulsive gambler, and eventual suicide.
Originally published in 1973.
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