The Kremlin Ball Explained

The Kremlin Ball
Author:Curzio Malaparte
Title Orig:Il ballo al Kremlino
Orig Lang Code:it
Translator:Jenny McPhee
Country:Italy
Language:Italian
Pub Date:1971
English Pub Date:10 April 2018

The Kremlin Ball (Italian: Il ballo al Kremlino) is an unfinished novel by the Italian writer Curzio Malaparte, published posthumously in 1971.

Plot

Inspired by Malaparte's visit to Moscow in 1929, the novel consists of scenes and interactions with high-level Communist Party officials. The novel's protagonist describes and analyses this "communist nobility" as a continuation of the decadent ruling elite it replaced, only more vulgar. He also interacts with leading Russian writers of the time, including Mikhail Bulgakov and Vladimir Mayakovsky.[1]

Publication

The novel was left unfinished, but the material was published posthumously in 1971 in the last volume of 's edition of Malaparte's complete works. Adelphi Edizioni published a version edited by Raffaella Rodondi in 2012, and New York Review Books put out an English translation of this version in 2018. It has the subtitle Material for a Novel (Italian: materiale per un romanzo).[2]

Reception

Mario Andrea Rigoni of Corriere della Sera wrote that The Kremlin Ball, if finished, could have been the third part in a triptych about Europe's decadence, after Malaparte's novels Kaputt (1944) and The Skin (1949). Rigoni wrote that the state of the work means it contains repetitions and inconsistencies, but that this does not make Malaparte's writing obscure. He described the book as an unusual combination of literary portrait and anecdote.

of Il Giornale wrote that the ideological snobbery and sense of moral superiority Malaparte attributes to the Soviet leaders make them reminiscent of later radical chic trends, and that "Malaparte's pen, extremely attentive to detail, is ruthless".[3]

Publishers Weekly called the book "strange, aimless, and impassioned" in its descriptions and "halfway successful" in its ambition to portray the vanity and tragedy of the Soviet Union before the Great Purge.[4]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Kremlin Ball . . 1 January 2018 . 11 December 2023 .
  2. News: Rigoni . Mario Andrea . Mario Andrea Rigoni . 9 December 2012 . Al ballo dei nobili sovietici . . it . 11 December 2023 .
  3. News: Gnocchi . Alessandro . 14 December 2012 . Quel gran ballo al Kremlino in cui nacquero i radical chic . . it . 11 December 2023 .
  4. News: The Kremlin Ball . . 22 January 2018 . 11 December 2023 .