Faber Members get 10% off their first order

Summer in Baden-Baden (Faber Editions)

Leonid Tsypkin

Join Dostoevsky on his tumultuous honeymoon in this hypnotic cult classic, introduced by Susan Sontag.

99 in stock

£9.99£8.99
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571386895
Date Published
06.06.2024
Delivery
All orders are sent via Royal Mail and are tracked: choose from standard or premium delivery.
Summary

Join Dostoevsky on his tumultuous honeymoon in this hypnotic cult classic , introduced by Susan Sontag.

‘A wonderful work of art.’ Jon McGregor
Extraordinary in its confidence and enchantment.’ Chris Power
‘Addictive, dreamlike and dazzlingly unique.’ Adam Thirlwell
‘Luminous, melancholy and enraptured.’ Chloe Aridjis

Why was I reading this book now, in a railway-carriage, beneath a wavering, flickering, electric light-bulb . .

Summer, 1867:
The newlywed Dostoevsky and his young wife Anna – his one-time secretary – are travelling to the German spa resort of Baden-Baden on honeymoon. Their love is ecstatic, yet the author is plagued by demons: haunted by his crimes and punishments, consumed by fevers of jealousy, gambling to avoid mounting debts and shaken by epileptic fits.

Winter, 1970s: Our Jewish narrator embarks on a pilgrimage from Moscow to Leningrad to trace the footsteps of his literary hero. As the train travels across the Soviet Union’s bleak expanses, he immerses himself in Anna’s travel journal: and their journeys – past and present, real and imagined – soon become entwined.

The result of a clandestine literary vocation, Summer in Baden-Baden was smuggled out of the Soviet Union in 1981 and first published in a Russian émigré weekly in the USA. It has since been hailed as a trailblazing modern classic, translated into more than twenty languages – and its hypnotic, enigmatic power only grows.

Critic Reviews

A short poetic masterpiece.

New York Times
Critic Reviews

Amazing, beautiful, extraordinary … There is surely nothing like it anywhere.

James Wood, Guardian
Critic Reviews

That this book exists is a small miracle . . . One of the most beautiful and oddest books I have read about the singular power literature has over its devotees . . . Moving and wry.

Times
Critic Reviews

Fidgety, desperate, and defiantly brilliant, this short shout of a novel perfectly evokes both an apparition of Dostoevsky and the circumstances of its own creation ... A frantic, frenetic, fever-burst of a novel; a wonderful work of art.

Jon McGregor
Critic Reviews

[A] singular novel . . . Tsypkin’s portrait of a tormented soul is interesting enough, but what sets it apart is his breathless, meandering and high-velocity prose . . . Twisting, genre-bending . . . Hallucinatory . . . A single, unitary example of imaginative biography . . . There is something miraculous about the novel’s survival, a feeling that translates to the reading experience too.

Financial Times
Critic Reviews

There is no other novel quite like this one. The way it dances between forms – fiction and biography, story and essay, Dostoevsky’s life and Tsypkin’s own – is extraordinary in its confidence and enchantment. Of all the novels that imagine their way into a writer’s life, this is, I think, my favourite.

Chris Power