Less Than One: Selected Essays, By Joseph Brodsky

A Soviet story in which Dickens counts for more than Stalin

Lesley McDowell
Saturday 22 October 2011 03:44 EDT
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This collection begins with Brodsky's memories of growing up in the Soviet Union and progresses through his love of literature (which he attributes to his homeland where, for a people desperate to escape the harsh realities of life in a totalitarian system, "Dickens was more real than Stalin or Beria"), to his veneration for certain poets, such as Anna Akhmatova and W H Auden.

Literature is political for him, as is living: his essay "On Tyranny" shows how his upbringing is never far from his mind. The loss of individuality is a loss prevented by art, by poetry, and when Brodsky writes about St Petersburg in particular, his own poetic gifts come to the fore.

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