The Town of N explained

The Town of N
Author:Leonid Dobychin
Country:Soviet Union
Language:Russian
Release Date:1935

The Town of N (Russian: Город Эн) is a 1935 novel by Leonid Dobychin. Publication of the novel caused criticism (the novel was attacked for "formalism"), leading to the author's disappearance and the presumable death by suicide. Although the town N takes its name from a town in Gogol's Dead Souls it is probably based on Dvinsk. Publication of the novel in 1935 caused criticism leading to the author's disappearance and the presumable death by suicide. It is being compared to the novels by James Joyce and Marcel Proust.[1] It was first published in English in 1998.

The novel follows the stream of consciousness of a boy from age seven in 1901 until he is 15. The boy relates events of his family, school years, father's death, readings, first romance and the eruption of the Russo-Japanese War. The author's irony and the main character's description of the provincial society in which he lives also make the novel close to Dead Souls.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Robert Chandler Russian Short Stories from Pushkin to Buida, 2005 0141910240 Dobychin's stories and The Town of N., a short novel written in the voice of a child, have been compared to James Joyce's ...
  2. https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-8101-1589-7 Fiction Book Review