
In this international anthology you’ll hear the stark, haunting voice of a writer who watched Russia’s turbulent turn of the early twentieth century from the margins of society. The stories range from a darkly comic re‑imagining of the French Revolution—where a king literally loses his head—to a bleak portrait of a young idealist confronting an unforgiving abyss. Andreyev’s prose is spare yet vivid, pulling listeners into cramped rooms, damp prisons, and restless crowds, all while probing the fragile line between hope and despair.
The collection also includes a lyrical prose‑poem about a seemingly frail hero whose inner fire fuels a quiet rebellion, and a chilling narrative about seven condemned men that echoes the dread of state terror. Though written over a century ago, the works pulse with a timeless concern for individual freedom under oppressive regimes. Listeners will find a blend of psychological intensity and stark social commentary that makes the stories feel both historical and eerily contemporary.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (472K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously provided by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2015-08-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1871–1919
A master of dark, intense fiction, this Russian writer brought psychological pressure and moral unease to stories and plays that still feel startlingly modern. His work moves between realism and early expressionism, with a sharp eye for fear, suffering, and the limits of human endurance.
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