Vankila

audiobook

Vankila

by Maksim Gorky

FI·~1 hours

Chapters

Description

A cold, rain‑soaked day blankets the city in a thick, grey haze. Police forces march through the streets, their boots echoing against the slick cobblestones, while a restless crowd of men and women presses forward, their faces a mixture of fear, anger, and forced smiles. The atmosphere crackles with suppressed shouts and the uneasy question of whether this is the moment to rise up or retreat.

In the midst of the turmoil walks Mischa Malinin, a bright‑eyed university freshman caught between compassion and panic. He watches the desperation around him, feels the weight of shame and helplessness, and suddenly finds a surge of youthful courage that propels him forward. As he confronts the brutal police presence, his voice rises, demanding dignity and justice, revealing the raw tension between authority and the yearning for freedom.

The opening sets the stage for a story of social unrest, personal awakening, and the struggle to find one’s voice amid oppression, inviting listeners to experience the charged emotions of a city on the brink.

Details

Language

fi

Duration

~1 hours (83K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2016-11-23

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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