
It opens on a hazy summer morning in a small Russian port town, where officers and civil servants drift from a night‑long swim to the pavilion for coffee and tea. There we meet the wiry, thirty‑three‑year‑old clerk Ivan Lajevski and his friend Samoilenco, a military doctor whose blunt looks mask a surprisingly gentle, generous nature. Their banter quickly turns philosophical as they argue over love, duty and the practicalities of supporting a woman they no longer cherish, revealing a clash between idealism and the harsh realities of everyday life.
The novel follows these two men as they navigate the tangled social web of their community—ranging from petty disputes to larger questions of honor and personal conscience. Set against vivid scenes of the sea, bustling cafés, and modest town gatherings, the story invites listeners into a richly drawn portrait of early‑twentieth‑century Russian society, where humor, melancholy, and moral doubt intertwine.
Language
fi
Duration
~4 hours (231K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-02-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1860–1904
Best known for quiet, piercing stories and groundbreaking plays, this Russian master had a gift for making ordinary lives feel unforgettable. He trained as a doctor, wrote with unusual compassion, and helped reshape modern fiction and drama.
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