Vladimir Sorokin was born in a small town outside of Moscow in 1955. He trained as an engineer at the Moscow Institute of Oil and Gas, but turned to art and writing, becoming a major presence in the Moscow underground of the 1980s. His work was banned in the Soviet Union, and his first novel, The Queue, was published by the famed emigre dissident Andrei Sinyavksy in France in 1983. In 1992, Sorokin's Collected Stories was nominated for the Russian Booker Prize; in 1999, the publication of the controversial novel Blue Lard, which included a sex scene between clones of Stalin and Khrushchev, led to public demonstrations against the book and to demands that Sorokin be prosecuted as a pornographer; in 2001, he received the Andrei Biely Award for outstanding contributions to Russian literature. Sorokin is also the author of the screenplays for the movies Moscow, The Kopeck, and 4, and of the libretto for Leonid Desyatnikov's The Children of Rosental, the first new opera to be commissioned by the Bolshoi Theater since the 1970s. He has written eleven novels, as well as numerous plays and short stories, and his work has been translated throughout the world. He lives in Moscow.
[A] landmark of international postmodern fiction.
— Keith Gessen
"If queues were arranged in order of merit, it would only be fair
to put the young Soviet writer Vladimir Sorokin at the head."
-Guardian "With humor, anger and irony, Sorokin creates a
brilliant set piece, conveying the absurdity, the dehumanization
and, above all, the inevitability of waiting in line." —Publishers
Weekly "The Queue dispenses entirely with authorial
interpolation; indeed, it dispenses with everything except
dialogue, mostly curt one-liners, as though transcribed direct from
a radio play. The uncredited voices are queueing outside a clothes
shop in summer: Party panjandrums barge in front of the
accompaniment of quickly muffled protests; vodka circulates; the
Moscow sun dexlines; romance germinates. Anti-Soviet elements will
perhaps coo over Valdimir Sorokin's happy mining of elemental
koptimism from an unlikely seam; more pertinent to our purposes
this book, alone of the quartet, displays genuine zest." -The Times
(London) "This novel reduces to delightful absurdity the rough
democracy of the long lines that Soviet people-in-the-street endure
in order to buy "luxury" goods. Sorokin is an innovative young
writer, never published officially in the USSR, who draws on two
great Russian traditions sorely missing from Soviet literature:
avant-garde experiment and a flair for nonsense. The book has no
description, settings, or stage directionnothing but voices:
snatches of conversation, rumors, jokes, howls of rage, roll calls,
and sexy moans. Sorokin's magic pen turns this framework into a
mini-picaresque novel with a hero of sorts. Readers with some
imagination will enjoy following Vadim and his co-queuers through
their days and nights on line and off." -Library JournalMr. Sorokin
demonstrates a remarkable ear for dialogue...Occasionally in its
characters’ speech The Queue resembles, as befits a
colloquial account of an overnight queue, Waiting for Godot.
Its humor, however, is broader and nowhere as stark.
— The New York Times
"The Queue is a devastating satire of Soviet bureaucracy, and its
message is made even more effective by the deadpan method chosen
for its delivery...reminiscent of Kafka, Orwell and Beckett in
their explorations of nightmare societies...It's ending is ironic
and funny, while reinforcing the cynical tone of the whole novel
and the impression that the Soviet Union is a vast, unmanageable
bureaucracy." -Globe and Mail
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