Anton Chekhov, widely hailed as the supreme master of the short story,
also wrote five works long enough to be called short novels-here brought
together in one volume for the first time, in a masterly new translation
by the award-winning translators Richard Pevear and Larissa
Volokhonsky.
*
The Steppe*--the most lyrical of the five--is an account of a
nine-year-old boy's frightening journey by wagon train across the steppe
of southern Russia. The Duel sets two decadent figures--a fanatical
rationalist and a man of literary sensibility--on a collision course
that ends in a series of surprising reversals. In The Story of an
Unknown Man, a political radical spying on an important official by
serving as valet to his son gradually discovers that his own terminal
illness has changed his long-held priorities in startling ways. Three
Years recounts a complex series of ironies in the personal life of a
rich but passive Moscow merchant. In My Life, a man renounces wealth
and social position for a life of manual labor.
The resulting conflict between the moral simplicity of his ideals and
the complex realities of human nature culminates in a brief apocalyptic
vision that is unique in Chekhov's work.