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(The Pyat Quartet ● 1) Byzantium Endures…
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(The Pyat Quartet ● 1) Byzantium Endures (1981 original; edició 1982)

de Michael Moorcock

Sèrie: Colonel Pyat (1)

MembresRessenyesPopularitatValoració mitjanaMencions
317682,338 (3.78)8
Meet Pyat: Tsarist rebel, Nazi thug, continental con man and reactionary counterspy. He is the dark and dangerous antihero of the legendary Michael Moorcock's most controversial work. Published in 1981to great critical acclaim - then condemned and unavailable in the United States for thirty years - Byzantium Endures is the story of a cocaine addict, sexual adventurer and obsessive anti-Semite whose journey from Leningrad to London connects him with those from Trotsky to Makhno, and whose career echoes that of the twentieth century's descent into Fascism and total war.… (més)
Membre:AntAllan
Títol:(The Pyat Quartet ● 1) Byzantium Endures
Autors:Michael Moorcock
Informació:London: Flamingo/Fontana/Collins, pb, 404pp
Col·leccions:La teva biblioteca, § Fiction
Valoració:
Etiquetes:♻ cover: Chris Corr, ‡ colonel pyat, ≈ fiction, ≈ historical fiction, ⌘ pbB, ↪ novel

Informació de l'obra

Byzantium Endures de Michael Moorcock (1981)

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I think this had been sat on my bookshelf for approximately 30 years before I got round to reading it. Its a bit long winded and tedious in places, but lots of fun in others. The unreliable narrator meanders through life partaking in sex, drugs and implausible science.

This is all taking place in Kiev, Odessa, St Petersburg against the backdrop of the Russian Revolution. Of course reading it in 2022 the Ukrainian place names are all too familiar due to the current war, which gives an extra layer of interest.

Its the first in a 4 part series, I'm not sure I'll get to the others if I'm honest. I just found it a bit of a trudge overall. ( )
  AlisonSakai | Nov 1, 2022 |
Ever heard of an unreliable narrator? I hadn't, so this book was a bit of a shock and a revelation. I must have been 13-15 years old and I'd been devouring Moorcock's fantasies at a rate of knots, without worrying at all about the allegorical or Tolkien-reactionary nature of them, which I didn't really catch up on for a few more years. So I was in the library and came across this book and picked it up without thinking or looking closely, just 'cos it had "Moorcok" written on the spine...it was a surprise, therefore, to be confronted by a historical novel that employs that pretending to be based on real documents technique that there is probably a name for and not a hint of fantasy in sight.

Except there is actually plenty of fantasy, really, as Moorcock plainly states in his foreword, where he introduces the narrator of the book as if he is a personal acquaintance who recently died and says the following narrative is based on recorded conversations between the two of them. Moorcock states that Pyat - a protagonist that could hardly be called a hero - is a liar and moderately demented. But I didn't really get it until 3/4 of the way through the novel, when I realised that Pyat was talking complete BS and probably had been several times before, now that I stop to think about it....

It was tough going, with really long paragraphs, a fairly slow pace and a narrative that would wander between telling the tale and ranting about politics, race and religion fairly arbitrarily. It was educational, though; not only did I learn what an unreliable narrator is, I learned the meaning of "pogrom" and a bit about the history of the Russian October Revolution and subsequent civil war. (Mainly that is was really complicated and confusing and that most of the Big Names didn't have much clue what was going on either.)

Being a glutton for punishment I went on to read the sequel....

Fast-forward about twenty years and the fourth and final volume in the series has been published and I decide I ought to read them and figure out what it was all about.

So here we go again; Moorcock states in his foreword that Pyat is a liar - I think, man, he says right here that he can't be trusted - what an idiot I was! Was the narrative going to be as tough going as I remembered? No. The average paragraph length is quite long by contemporary standards, with some of them longer than a page, but this is worst at the beginning and end. Most of the rambling and ranting is confined to the beginning and end, too, subtly disguising the fact that Moorcock keeps the main portion of the narrative relatively straight-forward. It's not remotely so hard as reading William Langland as I am doing right now and calling it fun. Exactly how much of Pyat's adventures are completely made up, exagerated versions of the "truth" or unadorned "fact" cannot be ascertained - one has to judge for oneself, just as Moorcock says back in the foreword - but the general sweep of history can be relied on, I think, because that seems to be the point:

Pyat was born in 1900 in the Ukraine and lives through all of the most extreme turmoil of the first half of the century, his life being defined by it. Through Pyat, Moorcock gets to talk about all this history - in this volume covering the time from about 1912 up to and inclusive of 1920 in detail. The main strength of the book is how convincing Pyat is as a character and how ironic - Pyat is an anti-semitic ethnic Jew who follows the Christian Orthodox Church, for instance. Pyat is not overly likable - a boaster and liar, spending most of his time pursuing his self interest (or survival, later, which is easier to sympathise with) or his vices and being outrageously racist. But he is not a complete monster either; he genuinely attempts to look after his family and childhood friend when politics deteriorates into revolution and war.

The evocation of social atmosphere whether it be Bohemian Odessa and Kiev or those same cities living amidst famine and destruction only a few years later is excellent and perhaps one of Moorcock's primary purposes - but I'll have to read the other three volumes to be sure. ( )
  Arbieroo | Jul 17, 2020 |
Jack Isidore of Seville, CA* as played in the film adaptation by Rade Serbedzija, telling the story of the Russian Revolution from the barstool next to you, with lots of antisemetic rants and flights of nostalgic fancy. Doesn't sound too interesting, but actually weirdly fascinating. There are three sequels. But I need a break.

*See Philip K. Dick's Confessions of a Crap Artist ( )
  KateSherrod | Aug 1, 2016 |
A wonderfully tangy picaresque romp through the chaos of the Ukrainian civil war in the aftermath of the 1917 revolution. The scenes in Odessa are particularly delightful. ( )
  dazzyj | Nov 25, 2014 |
The first part of Moorcock's Pyat quartet, Byzantium Endures is Pyatnitski's life story from being a boy to the age of 20. A character obsessed about religion, and his own self-worth, he has to duck and dive to survive in the maelstrom of WW1 and the Russian Civil War. ( )
  ascapola | Dec 8, 2007 |
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Meet Pyat: Tsarist rebel, Nazi thug, continental con man and reactionary counterspy. He is the dark and dangerous antihero of the legendary Michael Moorcock's most controversial work. Published in 1981to great critical acclaim - then condemned and unavailable in the United States for thirty years - Byzantium Endures is the story of a cocaine addict, sexual adventurer and obsessive anti-Semite whose journey from Leningrad to London connects him with those from Trotsky to Makhno, and whose career echoes that of the twentieth century's descent into Fascism and total war.

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