Author | Venedict Yerofeyev |
---|---|
Original title | Москва - Петушки |
Language | Russian |
Genre | postmodernist prose poem |
Publisher | Self-published (Samizdat) |
Publication date | 1970 (Samizdat) & 1973 (commercial release, in Israel) |
Publication place | Soviet Union |
OCLC | 6144525 |
Moscow-Petushki, also published in English as Moscow to the End of the Line, Moscow Stations, and Moscow Circles, is a postmodernist prose poem[citation needed] by Russian writer and satirist Venedikt Yerofeyev.
Written between 1969 and 1970 and passed around in samizdat,[1] it was first published in 1973 in Israel[2] and later, in 1977, in Paris.
It was published in the Soviet Union only in 1989, during the perestroika era of Soviet history, in the literary almanac Vest' (Весть) and in the magazine Abstinence and Culture (Трезвость и Культура, Trezvost i Kultura) in a slightly abridged form.
According to David Remnick, "Yerofeyev’s vodka-sodden classic is an account of one broken man’s attempt to get from here to there in an era of absolute societal rot. It’s the funniest thing in Russian since Ilf and Petrov".[3]