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Faithful Ruslan
Faithful Ruslan | Georgi Vladimov
1 post | 1 read | 12 to read
Unavailable for twenty years, this harrowing allegory of obedience to authority is esteemed as “one of the defining literary texts of the post-Stalin period.” (The Guardian)Set in a remote Siberian depot immediately following the demolition of one of the gulag’s notorious camps and the emancipation of its prisoners, Faithful Ruslan is an embittered cri de coeur from a writer whose circumstances obliged him to resist the violence of arbitrary power. “Every writer who writes anything in this country is made to feel he has committed a crime,” Georgi Vladimov said. Dissident, he said, is a word that “they force on you.” His mother, a victim of Stalin’s anti-Semitic policy, had been interred for two years in one of the camps from which Vladimov derived the wrenching detail of Faithful Ruslan. The novel circulated in samizdat for more than a decade, often attributed to Solzhenitsyn, before its publication in the West led to Vladimov’s harassment and exile. A starving stray, tortured and abandoned by the godlike “Master” whom he has unconditionally loved, Ruslan and his cadre of fellow guard dogs dutifully wait for the arrival of new prisoners—but the unexpected arrival of a work party provokes a climactic bloodletting. Fashioned from the perceptions of an uncomprehending animal, Vladimov’s insistently ironic indictment of the gulag spirals to encompass all of Man’s inexplicable cruelty.From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Faithful Ruslan | Georgi Vladimov
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Currently reading...Told from the point of view of Ruslan, a guard dog at a Soviet labor camp. The camp closes and Ruslan is left to his own devices with no master to obey. Heartbreaking and exquisitely written.

SGJ Russian dogs: doesn't Tolstoy go into the dog's head in War and Peace? Name ... Laska, maybe? In America, dog-POV means "cozy," right? Like The canine version of Matlock. This one sounds cool, though. Non-human angles take a steady pen. 9y
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