J. A. E. Curtis has been exploring the life and works of Mikhail Bulgakov since the 1970s, when The Master and Margarita sensationally appeared for the first time. She teaches Russian Literature at the University of Oxford, and has also published research on Evgenii Zamiatin, and on 21st-century Russian drama.
This new volume is an excellent appreciation of Bulgakov's second, final and greatest novel The Master and Margarita. Curtis is a brilliant Bulgakov scholar and her 1991 edition of his letters and diaries delivers an incredibly moving and powerful examination of his relationship with his wife and the ways in which writers were oppressed by the Soviet state. These acts of oppression are generally discussed in a circumspect way in The Master and Margarita and Curtis is at pains to dismiss previous critics' readings of the novel as something which must be ' decoded before it will reveal its secrets.' ... Curtis is an erudite and engaging guide to this wonderful book. It's a well-known text to me and I still found a huge amount to enjoy here. -Fortochka, Medium A Reader's Companion to The Master and Margarita succeeds in unpacking a novel which is complex thematically, textologically and from a narrative perspective. The companion does this with rigour, clarity and subtlety and, as such, represents an indispensable guide to a twentieth-century Russian classic. -John Cook, University of Melbourne, Australian Slavonic and East European Studies As its title suggests, this book is designed for those approaching The Master and Margarita for the first time (perhaps on an undergraduate Russian course), and as such it makes an excellent introduction to the text. However, it is also suitable for those who are already familiar with The Master and Margarita and with Bulgakov scholarship, and perhaps are returning to teaching the text after a break, since it provides a comprehensive overview of scholarly literature on the novel and contains some particular and original insights into it. ... Overall, this is a hugely enjoyable read. It is beautifully written and carefully curated, yet allows Curtis's own nuanced readings to shine through. -Elizabeth Harrison, BASEES Newsletter