The Voronezh Notebooks by Osip Mandelstam - ISBN: 9781590179109
Paperback
Last poems from exile: Mandelstam faces death, power, and poetry.

The Voronezh Notebooks

$31.04

  • Paperback

    112 pages

  • Release Date

    15 January 2016

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Summary

Voronezh Notebooks assembles newly-translated poems from Osip Mandelstam, all of which were written during his infamous exile, just before he was sent to his death in a labor camp. This is indispensable reading for Mandelstam fans and for readers, students, and scholars of twentieth-century Russian poetry.

Osip Mandelstam is one of the greatest of twentieth-century poets and Voronezh Notebooks, a sequence of poems composed between 1935 and 1937 when he was living in internal exile in …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781590179109
ISBN-10:1590179102
Author:Osip Mandelstam, Andrew Davis
Publisher:New York Review Books
Imprint:NYRB Poets
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:112
Edition:Main
Release Date:15 January 2016
Weight:110g
Dimensions:178mm x 117mm x 7mm
Series:NYRB Poets
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“Throughout Voronezh Notebooks, Mandelstam seems energized by an uncontainable joy in his dangerous disobedience. ‘Fear makes it beautiful,’ he says of his frozen surroundings. ‘Something terrible might occur.’…Andrew Davis’s translation is vibrant and densely lyrical. More than his predecessors, he brings out a playful, gnomic quality in Mandelstam’s verse that calls to mind Emily Dickinson. He beautifully evokes a voice unafraid to burn itself out in the passion of creation.” —Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal“Mandelstam’s poems are both bold and delicate. His imagery can seem both profoundly startling yet entirely natural. More than any other translator, Andrew Davis succeeds in reproducing all of these qualities.” —Robert Chandler“Mandelstam was a tragic figure. Even while in exile in Voronej, he wrote works of untold beauty and power. And he had no poetic forerunners…In all of world poetry, I know of no other such case. We know the sources of Pushkin and Blok, but who will tell us from where that new, divine harmony, Mandelstam’s poetry, came from?” –Anna Akhmatova“Russia’s greatest poet in this century.” –Joseph Brodsky“It is one thing to discover internal unity in a scholar’s quiet career, quite another to find it in the works of a man subjected to years of harassment, terrorization, exile and proscription. In circumstances as hostile as those in the Soviet State, [Mandelstam] was forced to sacrifice everything…in order that this gift survive as it was meant to.” –Sven Birkerts, The Iowa Review

About The Author

Osip Mandelstam

Osip Mandelstam (1891-1938) was born and raised in St. Petersburg, where he attended the prestigious Tenishev School, before studying at the universities of St. Petersburg and Heidelberg and at the Sorbonne. Mandelstam first published his poems in Apollyon, an avant-garde magazine, in 1910, then banded together with Anna Akhmatova and Nikolai Gumilev to form the Acmeist movement, which advocated an aesthetic of exact description and chiseled form, as suggested by the title of Mandelstam’s first book, Stone (1913). During the Russian Revolution, he left Leningrad for the Crimea and Georgia, and settled in Moscow in 1922,where his second collection of poems, Tristia, appeared. Unpopular with the Soviet authorities, Mandelstam found it increasingly difficult to publish his poetry, though an edition of collected poems did come out in 1928. In 1934, after reading a poem denouncing Stalin to friends, Mandelstam was arrested and sent into exile. He produced many new poems during these years, and his wife, Nadezhda, memorized his work in case his notebooks were destroyed or lost. In 1937, Mandelstam’s exile ended and he returned to Moscow, but he was arrested again almost immediately. This time he was sentenced to hard labor in Siberia. He was last seen in a transit camp near Vladivostok.

Andrew Davis is a poet, cabinetmaker, and visual artist. His current project is the long poem IMPLUVIUM. He divides his time between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the north coast of Spain.

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