Baron Munchausen's hold on the European imagination dates back to the
late eighteenth century when he first pulled himself (and his horse) out
of a swamp by his own upturned pigtail. Inspired by the extravagant
yarns of a straight-faced former cavalry officer, Hieronymus von
Münchhausen, the best-selling legend quickly eclipsed the real-life
baron who helped the Russians fight the Turks. Galloping across
continents and centuries, the mythical Munchausen's Travels went
through hundreds of editions of increasing length and luxuriance.
Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky, the Russian modernist master of the unsettling
and the uncanny, also took certain liberties with the mythical baron. In
this phantasmagoric roman à clef set in 1920s Berlin, London, and
Moscow, Munchausen dauntlessly upholds his old motto "Truth in lies,"
while remaining a fierce champion of his own imagination. At the same
time, the two-hundred-year-old baron and self-taught philosopher has
agreed to return to Russia, Lenin's Russia, undercover. This reluctant
secret agent has come out of retirement to engage with the real world.