Dead Souls
Descripción editorial
Dead Souls, first published in 1842, is Nikolai Gogol’s brilliant and biting satire of 19th-century Russian society. The novel follows Pavel Ivanovich Chichikov, a mysterious and smooth-talking opportunist who travels the Russian countryside buying up “dead souls”—the names of deceased serfs still listed on official censuses—to fraudulently inflate his social standing and wealth. Through this darkly comic premise, Gogol exposes the absurdities, corruption, and moral emptiness of the Russian bureaucratic and landowning classes. Blending grotesque humor with poignant social critique, Dead Souls presents a vivid panorama of provincial Russia and a rogues' gallery of eccentric characters, each more memorable than the last. Intended as part of a larger, unfinished trilogy, the novel reflects Gogol’s evolving spiritual and philosophical concerns, combining realism with the surreal. Widely considered one of the greatest achievements in Russian literature, Dead Souls is both a comedic road novel and a profound meditation on identity, greed, and the soul of a nation.