The Comedienne

audiobook

The Comedienne

by Władysław Stanisław Reymont

EN·~9 hours

Chapters

Description

In the quiet reaches of Polish countryside, a modest railway station at Bukowiec becomes the backdrop for a world of wandering performers. Reymont paints the landscape with vivid detail—beech‑laden hills, mist‑kissed marshes and the rhythmic clatter of trains—while introducing the provincial troupe known locally as “comedians.” Their life is far from the polished stages of Warsaw; they rehearse beneath open skies, assuming every role from tragedy to farce, bound together by hope and hard‑won camaraderie.

At the heart of the troupe is Janina, a bright‑eyed actress whose talent shines even as poverty and superstition linger on the road. When a chance encounter with a charismatic newcomer promises a future beyond the makeshift stages, she must weigh love, ambition, and the relentless demands of a life spent performing for strangers. The novel follows her through the first season of touring, revealing the bittersweet mix of laughter and loss that defines a true comedienne.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (519K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2008-06-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Władysław Stanisław Reymont

Władysław Stanisław Reymont

1867–1925

Best known for the sweeping novel The Peasants, this Polish writer brought rural life to the page with unusual vividness and scale. He won the 1924 Nobel Prize in Literature and remains one of the central figures of modern Polish fiction.

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