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FICTION and MEDIA

CRIME AND MEDIA — TWO PEAS IN A POD

Posts tagged Literary satire
The Inspector-General

By Nicolay Gogol; Translated by Thomas Seltzer from the Russian; Edited with a New Preface by Colin Heston.
A Comedy in Five Acts
What happens when a corrupt town is terrified by the rumor of a government inspection—and mistakes the wrong man for the inspector?

First performed in 1836, The Inspector-General (Revizor) is Nicolay Gogol's immortal masterpiece of satire, one of the most influential comedies ever written. Set in a remote provincial town of Imperial Russia, the play begins when local officials learn that a secret government inspector is on his way from St. Petersburg. Panic spreads through the administration. Bribes have been taken, records have been neglected, justice has been compromised, and public services are in disarray. Desperate to conceal their misconduct, the town's leaders mistakenly identify a young, penniless civil servant as the feared inspector.

What follows is a brilliant comedy of deception, vanity, corruption, and self-delusion. As the bewildered visitor discovers his unexpected power, the town's officials compete to flatter, bribe, and impress him, exposing their own greed and incompetence in increasingly absurd and hilarious ways.

More than a nineteenth-century Russian farce, The Inspector-General remains strikingly relevant today. Gogol's penetrating observations about bureaucracy, political fear, official misconduct, and the misuse of authority continue to resonate wherever institutions place appearances above integrity. His unforgettable characters reveal timeless truths about human weakness, ambition, and the corrupting influence of power.

This edition features Thomas Seltzer's classic English translation together with a new Preface by Colin Heston examining Gogol's life, the historical background of the play, its enduring relevance, and its place among the greatest works of world literature.

A landmark of Russian drama, The Inspector-General combines laughter with sharp social criticism and remains as entertaining—and as unsettling—as when it first astonished audiences nearly two centuries ago.

This Read-Me.Org Classic Reprint includes:

• The complete text of Gogol's celebrated comedy
• Thomas Seltzer's English translation from the Russian
• A new scholarly Preface by Colin Heston
• Historical publication information
• Original cast and performance notes

A timeless masterpiece of satire that reminds us that corruption often reveals itself long before any inspector arrives.

Read-Me.Org Inc. New York-Philadelphia-Australia. 2026. 124 p.

Dead Souls

Colin Heston (Editor) Nikolai Gogol (Author) , J. Hogarth (Translator).

A swindler arrives in a sleepy provincial town with a scheme so absurd it just might work: buying up the names of serfs who have died but remain on the official census, "dead souls" that still carry value on paper. From this single, brilliant premise, Nikolai Gogol built one of the great comic novels of world literature — a rollicking journey through greed, vanity, and bureaucratic absurdity that is as sharp and funny today as it was in Tsarist Russia.

As Chichikov travels from estate to estate, charming and conniving his way past a gallery of landowners — the sentimental and useless Manilov, the suspicious and miserly Sobakevich, the chaotic and reckless Nozdryov — Gogol turns a simple con into something far larger: a portrait of a society built on appearances, paperwork, and self-deception. It is satire of the highest order, but never cruel; beneath the comedy runs a current of genuine tenderness for the country and the people Gogol is mocking, culminating in one of the most famous passages in Russian literature, the image of Russia itself as a speeding troika racing into an unknown future.

This edition includes:

  • The complete text of Part One, in the D. J. Hogarth translation

  • An introduction by John Cournos

  • A new preface by editor Colin Heston, exploring the novel's history, its unfinished second part, and what makes Gogol's voice so distinct

  • Two original illustrations depicting key scenes from the novel

Read-Me.Org Inc. New York-Philadelphia-Australia. 2026. p.297.