Twenty-six and One, and Other Stories

audiobook

Twenty-six and One, and Other Stories

by Maksim Gorky

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

A strikingly honest portrait of turn‑of‑the‑century Russia unfolds across these short tales, each a compact slice of life drawn from the author’s own wanderings through factories, bakeries, docks and streets. The narrator’s voice is unvarnished, speaking directly to the reader with the immediacy of someone who has lived the hardships he describes.

The stories focus on ordinary people—a baker’s apprentice trapped in a damp cellar, a weary longshoreman, a beggar sharing a humble meal with his grandson—capturing moments of struggle, fleeting hope and quiet dignity. Their plots are simple, often reduced to a single encounter, yet the vivid details and stark settings give each vignette a lasting emotional weight.

Through this collection, the writer offers a fresh, unpretentious take on realism, turning everyday labor and marginal lives into compelling narratives that linger long after the final line.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (160K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-12-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Maksim Gorky

Maksim Gorky

1868–1936

A self-taught writer who rose from deep poverty to become one of Russia’s most influential literary voices, he brought workers, wanderers, and outsiders to the center of modern fiction. His stories and plays helped shape socialist realism, but they also carry a raw sympathy for people struggling to survive.

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