Years after it went out of print, the fact that this book exists still brings me such profound joy. Russian, fast, or fun: you can have one of the three.pic.twitter.com/j5UrtP2Pzv
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What are other people's favorite language books? Extra bonus for no pictures and just a relentless (but perfectly sequenced) wall of grammar
There's also a series for learning English that I wish I could find again. It was impossibly British (think public school memoir written using the most basic grammar), went on forever about would/should, and lots of foreigners of a certain age have nostalgic memories of it
My rule of thumb for evaluating language textbooks: flip to the preface, where they talk about the basic sounds of the language. If you see a cryptically labeled cross-section of a tongue and throat, you're golden. If they are talking about "s like in 'measure'" ,throw it back.
And it was not wrong!
Pushkin, Tolstoy, and Dostoyevsky - probably worth trying to read in original
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