Kovina aikoina: Kertomus Suomen viimeisten nälkävuosien ajoilta

audiobook

Kovina aikoina: Kertomus Suomen viimeisten nälkävuosien ajoilta

by Karl August Tavaststjerna

FI·~5 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total

KOVINA AIKOINA

0:04

KARL A. TAVASTSTJERNA

0:05

ENSIMMÄINEN LUKU

13:53

TOINEN LUKU

16:37

KOLMAS LUKU

18:46

NELJÄS LUKU

17:42

VIIDES LUKU

14:48

KUUDES LUKU

14:29

SEITSEMÄS LUKU

17:34

KAHDEKSAS LUKU

16:52

Description

A bleak Finnish spring of 1867 stretches across a frozen landscape, where a lone horse‑drawn cart creaks down a muddy road that connects Helsinki to Hämeenlinna. The driver, a weather‑worn laborer, hauls a load of rye while the stubborn horse, Rusko, snorts against the cold wind. Their journey is marked by the stark contrast between the lingering winter snow and the faint promise of a summer that may never arrive.

Having fled his starving farm in northern Häme, the man carries the weight of a desperate choice: he left his wife, children, and livestock behind in hopes of finding work farther south. The narration reveals his pragmatic, almost ruthless reasoning, as he measures survival against the loss of his family. Each step on the road underscores the hunger that has gripped the nation, turning ordinary travel into a fight for existence.

Through vivid descriptions of the frozen river, the thin pine saplings, and the relentless wind, the story captures the atmosphere of Finland’s final famine years. Listeners will be drawn into the protagonist’s internal struggle, his reliance on Rusko, and the uncertain horizon that lies ahead, all while the landscape itself seems to echo his uncertainty.

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Details

Language

fi

Duration

~5 hours (298K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2014-02-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Karl August Tavaststjerna

Karl August Tavaststjerna

1860–1898

A central voice in Finnish literature in Swedish, he helped bring realism and naturalism to the fore in the late 1800s. His work is remembered for its sharp social eye, lyrical touch, and honest interest in ordinary lives.

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