![]() ![]() Suffice it to say that when Satan incognito brings a hellish gang to the officially atheist USSR, mayhem ensues, in the course of which the author verbally skewers the Soviet literary, social, and political establishments. This complex, multilayered, and Rabelaisian novel is impossible to summarize. Upon finally being printed, it became an international sensation that literati still acclaim as a modern classic. How this posthumously published satire got written in Stalinist Russia and survived is as fascinating a story as the one it tells. ![]() Two minor caveats: a few characterizations are too nasal, and his cockney accents for low-class Russian characters are a bit disconcerting. With a dramatic flair and a deep, multilayered voice, he pulls off a host of fantastical characters including Professor Woland (Satan) and several of his associates, Pontius Pilate and Jesus Christ, witches and madmen and a variety of early 20th-century Moscow literary and theater types. ![]() ![]() And after this audiobook, listeners can always go on to read the book with a confidence gleaned from this intelligent and entertaining interpretation.īulgakov’s satire of the greed and corruption of Soviet authorities illustrates the redemptive nature of art and faith, and Julian Rhind-Tutt’s superb interpretation does the classic full justice. Even if listeners aren’t totally sure what is going on at all times, this audiobook is still is a pleasure to listen to. Within a minute, he can voice three characters and the narrator, gliding silkily from one to another with great distinction among them. Fortunately, narrator Julian Rhind-Tutt, a British actor, is a magician with his voice. And then there is the fact that this novel is a satire and so it is up to the listener to figure out if the author actually means what he is saying. In addition, there is the usual difficulty of keeping the Russian names straight as characters are called by alternating versions of their first, middle and last names throughout. Actually, listeners may wish for some magic of their own to keep the three stories straight, to separate fantasy from reality and to appreciate the nuances of the stories, all of which require a knowledge of art, religion, history, the Soviet era and the life of Christ. The main story is set in Russia in the 1930’s and involves the devil who is disguised as Professor Woland, who can use black magic. It tells three stories, including that of Pontius Pilate and Jesus, the story of the Master who is in an insane asylum and his true love Margarita, and a writer who wants to destroy his own masterpiece which is the first story of Pontius Pilate. This novel, considered by many a masterpiece of 20th century Soviet era literature, is complex and many layered. A classic that can be read on many levels, it’s played strictly for laughs by Julian Rhind-Tutt. She makes a Faustian pact with the devil for true love’s sake so that the Master can write his precious books without fear of arrest. But maybe I’d be, too, if I had the magic ointment that makes one look 10 years younger. Bulgakov’s include Pontius Pilate, a talking cat who puts on black-rimmed spectacles to read official documents quite often upside down, the devil at whose annual grand ball Stravinsky conducts the band, a poet imprisoned in a psychiatric asylum not unconnected with the Master of the title, and his ever-faithful lover Margarita. His cast of characters, real and imaginary, make Dickens’s dramatis personae appear sparse. The absurdity of the Stalinist system is inventively mocked, Christ is sympathetically re-examined and over all is a layer of idiosyncratic fantasy.įirst published 26 years after his death in 1940, Bulgakov’s extraordinary satire of life under the political, cultural, religious and bureaucratic strictures of Stalinist tyranny has been variously described as Solzhenitsyn crossed with Lewis Carroll and the most powerful Russian novel of the 20th century. Rhind-Tutt cleverly indulges the satire and the fantasy in a novel unpublished until 26 years after Bulgakov’s death. ![]()
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