Vladimir Sorokin and Dissident Novelist Problem ...Middle East

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Vladimir Sorokin and Dissident Novelist Problem
It would be easy to mistake Vladimir Sorokin for a polemical novelist. Born on the outskirts of Moscow in 1955, he came of age as a novelist through the three great transitions of recent Russian history: the end of the USSR, the free-market chaos of the 1990s, and the return to neo-Soviet authoritarianism under Vladimir Putin. One of his best-known novels in the United States, Day of the Oprichnik, describes a Russian near future in which the tsardom has been restored and state thugs rain violence on the streets of Moscow. His 1999 novel, Blue Lard, famously features a scene in which the clones of Khrushchev and Stalin have anal sex. Though it hasn’t yet appeared in English, this work is pro

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