Most Read... John McAuliffeBill Manhire in Conversation with John McAuliffe
(PN Review 259)
Patricia CraigVal Warner: A Reminiscence
(PN Review 259)
Eavan BolandA Lyric Voice at Bay
(PN Review 121)
Joshua WeinerAn Exchange with Daniel Tiffany/Fall 2020
(PN Review 259)
Vahni CapildeoOn Judging Prizes, & Reading More than Six Really Good Books
(PN Review 237)
Christopher MiddletonNotes on a Viking Prow
(PN Review 10)
Next Issue Kirsty Gunn re-arranges the world John McAuliffe reads Seamus Heaney's letters and translations Chris Price's 'Songs of Allegiance' David Herman on Aharon Appelfeld Victoria Moul on Christopher Childers compendious Greek and Latin Lyric Book Philip Terry again answers the question, 'What is Poetry'
Poems Articles Interviews Reports Reviews Contributors
Reader Survey
PN Review Substack

This report is taken from PN Review 94, Volume 20 Number 2, November - December 1993.

Soviet Facts and Russian Fiction Jeremy Noble

Two million foreigners visited St Petersburg last year; not many of them, however, visited the literary museums, although Russian literature helped define the city as a cultural centre. There are always tourists at the palatial 'Museum Apartment of A.S. Pushkin' on the Moika embankment, and Dostoevsky's apartment is always good for a fifteen-minute stopover, but few people find their way to the museums of less well-known writers.

Conveniently for the trippers who visit the Hermitage, Pushkin lived only a few minutes walk away, and of course it helps Intourist that Russia's national poet had such a romantic life, and an even more compelling death. I was asked if I had lost my excursion group when I walked in alone, and did I want to look at the souvenirs. It is possible to buy a quill pen exactly like the one used by Pushkin himself, but you cannot buy any of his poetry. I followed a group of elderly Americans through the rooms of elegant Empire furniture, half listening to their chaperone: 'The great Russian poet … born 1799 … here, tragically his life came to an abrupt end on 29th January 1837 … mortally wounded … even in the pantry it is possible to see a tray which belonged to Push-kin's family … left huge debts … a waistcoat worn by Pushkin the day of his duel. …"

Leaning over the rope, I looked closely at some of the five thousand volumes in Push-Kin's library, ...


Searching, please wait... animated waiting image