The Outcasts, and Other Stories

audiobook

The Outcasts, and Other Stories

by Maksim Gorky

EN·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

In a cramped suburb of crumbling hovels, where moss‑covered roofs and shattered windows stare at one another like weary watchmen, life clings to the edges of poverty. Between the soot‑stained lanes and the grand stone houses perched on the hill, a river‑fed channel sweeps through, carrying both rain and dust past the makeshift dwellings. The atmosphere is dense with the scent of damp earth, stale smoke, and the unspoken resignation of its inhabitants.

At the far end of this bleak street stands an ancient, sagging two‑storey house that seems to bow under the weight of time. Inside its bleak shed‑turned lodging‑house, a retired cavalry officer runs a rough‑and‑ready refuge for drifters, his own battered presence a mix of faded authority and hard‑won habit. The setting teems with the quiet desperation of those who have nowhere else to go, hinting at the tangled lives that will unfold within its shadowed rooms.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (198K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at FreeLiterature. (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)

Release date

2017-10-31

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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