Monday Starts on Saturday…

… which means New Year’s Day must start on Christmas Eve! This recent review of Andrew Bromfield’s 2005 translation of the Strugatskiis’ Ponedel’nik nachinaetsia v subbotu (1964) as Monday Starts on Saturday, by blogger Russian Dinosaur, might interest Slavonic sci-fi blog readers. Monday is quite the Yuletide classic; not only does the book feature one of the most remarkable New Year’s Eve scenes in literature (when all the research magicians determinedly return to their labs before midnight, despite the efforts by the demons on the door and the rookie caretaker to send them home), it was filmed in 1982 by Konstantin Bromberg as Charodei, a romantic comedy set in a similar institute, NUINU (in Russian, ну и ну, or, now then) – the Universal Scientific Institute of Irregular Services (Научный универсальный институт необыкновенных услуг). Charodei is now prescribed watching for New Year’s Eve, if you can resist the gravitational pull of Ironiia sud’by (The Irony of Fate, another epochal Russian seasonal romance). Happy reading/watching….

Russian Studies in Literature – Strugatskiis special issue

I’d like to publicize this special issue of Russian Studies in Literature, for those of you with an institutional or personal subscription. Table of contents below:

Volume 47 Number 4 / Fall 2011

This issue contains:
The Strugatsky Brothers and Russian Science Fiction: Editor’s
Introduction
p. 3
John Givens

The Lessons of the Strugatskys
p. 7
Viacheslav Ivanov

The Meaning of (Private) Life, or Why Do We Read the Strugatskys?
p. 31
Irina Kaspe

A Selective Similarity: Dostoevsky in the Worlds of the Strugatsky
Brothers
p. 67
Mark Amusin

Russian Science Fiction: A Crisis of Concepts
p. 84
Sergei Sirotin

Clearly a must-read for Strugatskiis fans!