Odessa Stories

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Odessa Stories
Odesskie rasskazy - I. Babel, 1931.JPG
First complete edition (1931)
AuthorIsaac Babel
Original titleОдесские рассказы
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian
Publication date
1931
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)

Odessa Stories (Russian: Одесские рассказы, romanizedOdesskiye razzkazy), also known as Tales of Odessa, is a collection of four short stories by Isaac Babel, situated in Odessa in the last days of the Russian empire and the Russian Revolution. Published individually in Soviet magazines between 1921 and 1924 and collected into a book in 1931, they deal primarily with a group of Jewish thugs that live in Moldavanka, a ghetto of Odessa. Their leader is Benya Krik, known as the King, and loosely based on the historical figure Mishka Yaponchik.[1]

The short stories were turned into the film Benya Krik in 1926 by  [ru].

Contents[]

  • The King (Король) (1921)
  • How It Was Done in Odessa (Как это делалось в Одессе) (1923)
  • The Father (Отец) (1924)
  • Lyubka the Cossack (Любка Казак) (1924)

These stories are sometimes included in the cycle as well:[2]

  • Fairness in Brackets (Справедливость в скобках) (1921)
  • End of the Almshouse (Конец богадельни)
  • Froim Grach (Фроим Грач) (1934)
  • The Sunset (Закат)
  • Karl-Yankel (Карл-Янкель)

Translations[]

  • Walter Morison, in The Collected Stories (1955)
  • Andrew R. MacAndrew: Lyubka the Cossack and Other Stories (1963)
  • David McDuff, in Collected Stories (1994, Penguin)
  • Peter Constantine, in The Complete Works of Isaac Babel (Norton, 2002)
  • Boris Dralyuk, in Odessa Stories (Pushkin Press, 2016)
  • Val Vinokur, in The Essential Fictions (Northwestern University Press, 2017)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Tanny, Jarrod (2011). City of Rogues and Schnorrers: Russia's Jews and the Myth of Old Odessa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. ch. 3. ISBN 978-0-253-22328-9.
  2. ^ Briker, Boris (1994). "The Underworld of Benia Krik and I. Babel's "Odessa Stories"". Canadian Slavonic Papers / Revue Canadienne des Slavistes. 36 (1/2): 115–134. ISSN 0008-5006.

External links[]


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