Written during Chekhov's late twenties and early thirties, these stories
are the work of a young writer in dialogue with his masters: Tolstoy,
Gogol, and Furgenes. The stories-"The Steppe," "Panpipes," "The Kiss,"
"Verochka," "The Name-day Party," "A Dreary Story," "Gusev," and "The
Duel"-deal with good and evil, depicting heroes, villains, and monsters
with a lightness of touch and a lack of ambiguity that is largely absent
from Chekhov's later work.
This "Penguin Classics" edition, with new translations of the stories by
Ronald Wilks, includes an annotated bibliography, chronology, publishing
histories, and explanatory notes. An introduction by internationally
renowned Chekhov scholar Donald Rayfield provides a contemporary
understanding of this masterful Russian writer.