
In the opening pages we step into the bustling household of the Oblonskys, where a sudden revelation shatters the veneer of domestic bliss. The matriarch discovers her husband’s affair with the family’s former French governess, and the news ripples through every room, unsettling children, servants, and friends alike. Tolstoy uses this crisis to illustrate his famous opening observation that happy families are much the same, while each unhappy one is unique in its misery.
Amid the chaos, Prince Stepan (Stiva) Oblonsky awakens in a daze, half‑dreaming of distant feasts, only to confront the weight of his own guilt. His internal monologue blends humor and despair, setting the tone for a story that weaves personal drama with a broader portrait of Russian society. Listeners will be drawn into the vivid characters and the moral questions that begin to surface, promising a richly layered narrative.
Language
de
Duration
~21 hours (1213K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Norbert H. Langkau, Jens Nordmann and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2014-02-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1828–1910
One of the great giants of world literature, he combined sweeping storytelling with deep questions about love, family, faith, and how to live. His novels still feel vivid because they pay such close attention to ordinary human thoughts and choices.
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