Universally acclaimed as the master of the short-story form, Anton
Chekhov began his literary career as the author of brief tales and
vignettes of Russian life when he was still a young medical student.
Later rejected by the writer in the same self-effacing way in which he
repudiated some of his most celebrated works, the stories in this
collection not only testify to the early promise of his genius, but
deserve to be appreciated for their lapidary vividness and their
intrinsic stylistic quality.
Mostly dealing with the lives of downtrodden "little" men and
low-ranking civil servants as they navigate the corruption and
malpractice of Russian officialdom, this volume - here presented in
Stephen Pimenoff's lively new translation - bristles with wit and
humour, and is tinged by that understated note of melancholy and
lyricism that is a trademark of Chekhov's writing.