Red Pyramid Selected Stories

Red Pyramid Selected Stories by Vladimir Sorokin, published by New York Review of Books on February 27, 2024, is a collection of short fiction that showcases the author’s unique narrative style. Spanning Sorokin’s career, this edition presents a range of unsettling and provocative stories that reflect his mastery of parody and pastiche. The collection includes works that explore themes of desire and violence, offering readers a glimpse into the complexities of the human experience through Sorokin’s lens.
In this 320-page volume, readers will encounter a variety of stories that challenge conventional storytelling. Sorokin’s writing is characterized by its comic turns and genre-defying elements, as seen in pieces like “Obelisk” and “A Month in Dachau.” The collection also features deeply unsettling narratives such as “Tiny Tim,” where tenderness and horror coexist. This edition marks the first time Sorokin’s short stories have been collected in English, providing an opportunity for a wider audience to engage with his exploration of contemporary Russian society and its darker undercurrents.
Official synopsis Publisher
Extended comic turns like The Queue and relentless, mind-bending, genre-shredding extravaganzas like Ice Trilogy have established Vladimir Sorokin as a master of the contemporary novel. It is to Sorokin’s short fiction, however, that readers must turn to encounter the wildest and most unsettling of his inventions and provocations. Sorokin is a virtuoso of parody and pastiche, as well as a poet of the black sites where the human soul stands exposed to its own incontinent desires, and Red Pyramid spans the whole of his career, from his emergence in the Soviet Union as a member of Moscow’s artistic underground to his late preeminence as an observer and interpreter of the Putin era, with its squalid parade of gruesome folly and unhinged violence. Included here are queasy tour-de-forces, like the early “Obelisk,” a story as scatological as it is conceptual; the notorious “A Month in Dachau,” which earned Sorokin his sobriquet as the Russian Sade; and profoundly unsettling texts like “Tiny Tim,” where tenderness is inseparable from horror.
Sorokin’s stories have appeared in The New Yorker, n+1, Harper’s Magazine, and The Baffler. This is the first time they have been collected in English.
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