Abstract

The Novelist Fadeyev

Kunitz, Joshua | April 9, 1930 issue

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The article discusses books and authors. When writer Alexander Fadeyev's novel, "The Nineteen," first appeared, in 1927, the Russian critics acclaimed it as the best and most authentic depiction of the red partisans-irregular, spontaneously organized Soviet troops-in their bitter struggle against the whites. What distinguished Fadeyev, a Communist, from the middle-class writers who dealt with the civil war and the Revolution, was, the Russian critics pointed out, the restraint, the realism, one might almost say, the naturalism, of his narrative.

See Also:

AUTHORS; LITERATURE; COMMUNISM; CIVIL war; AUTHORSHIP; BOOKS
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