This Wordsworth Edition includes an exclusive Introduction by Anthony Briggs.
This is, quite simply, the funniest book in the Russian language before the twentieth century..
It is an enjoyable comic romp through a retarded part of a backward country, a picaresque series of grotesque portraits, situations and conversations described with Gogolian humour based mainly on hyperbole.
Will he get away with it? Who will rumble him? Does this narrative contain a deeper message about Russia itself or the spiritual health of humanity? There is much interest and some suspense in considering these issues, but the real pleasure of this story lies elsewhere.
What he does not say is that he then proposes to take out a huge mortgage against these fictitious citizens and buy himself a nice estate in Eastern Russia.
Chichikov is willing to relieve their owners of the tax burden by buying the titles for a song.
These are the papers relating to serfs who have died since the last census, but who remain on the record and still attract a tax demand.
The unctuous Pavel Chichikov goes around the local estates buying up \'Dead souls\'.
There is a stranger in town, and he is behaving oddly.
Russia in the 1840s.
This Wordsworth Edition includes an exclusive Introduction by Anthony Briggs