THE GOLDEN GATE (NOVEL)
'''The Golden Gate''' (1986) is poet and novelist Vikram Seth's first novel. The work is a novel in verse composed of 690 Onegin stanzas (sonnets written in iambic tetrameter, with the rhyme scheme following the unusual ''ababccddeffegg'' pattern of ''Eugene Onegin''). It was inspired by Charles Johnston's translation of Pushkin's 1833 Russian classic, ''Eugene Onegin''.
Set in the 1980s, ''The Golden Gate'' follows the lives of a group of yuppies in San Francisco. Seth based the work on his experiences as a graduate student in Economics at Stanford University; portions of it were written in, and make reference to, the ''Printers Inc. Bookstore'' and ''Cafe'' in Palo Alto, California (sections 8.13 and 8.14).
| Contents |
| External links |
External links
★ Powell's review
★ Selections from The Golden Gate
★ The Literary Encyclopedia (in progress)
★ An online copy of Charles Johnston's translation of Onegin
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