Twilight of the Eastern Gods

by Ismail Kadare

Professor of French Studies David Bellos (Translator) and David Bellos (Translator)

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Book cover for Twilight of the Eastern Gods

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1958. In a dorm room in Moscow, a young writer is woken by the sound of angry voices on the radio. Through the fog of a hangover he hears the news that a novel called Doctor Zhivago has earned its author the Nobel Prize. There is uproar. The author, Boris Pasternak, faces exile, the press hound him and demand that he refuse the award. A few days earlier the young writer found a copy of this book - could those simple pages really be so dangerous?

Based on Ismail Kadare's own experience, Twilight of the Eastern Gods is a fictionalised recreation of his time as a student at the prestigious Gorky Institute for World Literature - a strange 'factory of the intellect' set up to produce a new generation of Socialist writers. With its drunken nights, uninspiring professors, specially selected students and enforced Socialist Realism his time at the Gorky Institute brought Kadare to the brink of abandoning writing altogether.

In English for the first time, Twilight of the Eastern Gods is a portrait of a city and a time, it is a story of youth, of disenchantment and of the incredible importance of the written word.

  • ISBN10 0802123112
  • ISBN13 9780802123114
  • Publish Date 4 November 2014 (first published 7 August 2014)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Imprint Grove Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 224
  • Language English