
A young nobleman, confined to his sickroom in a remote village, begins a diary just days before he expects to die. His voice is wry and self‑aware, oscillating between bleak metaphysics and the mundane details of a life shaped by a gambling father and a relentlessly virtuous mother. Through his candid confession we glimpse the restless boredom of a “superfluous” aristocrat, the absurdity he finds in trying to record a whole existence in a fortnight, and the quiet humor that colors his reflections on family, duty, and the looming end.
The collection gathers several of Turgenev’s short works, each offering a sharp portrait of 19th‑century Russian society—from idle gentry to the subtle struggles of ordinary people. Listeners will appreciate his elegant prose, the blend of melancholy and wit, and the timeless questions about purpose, identity, and the fleeting nature of life. This is a thoughtful, intimate listening experience that invites contemplation without giving away the story’s later turns.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (363K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1883
A master of psychological realism, this great Russian novelist is best known for works like Fathers and Sons and for his clear, graceful prose. His fiction often explores love, social change, and the tensions between generations with unusual warmth and insight.
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