Ivan A. Goncharov Bücher
Iwan Alexandrowitsch Gontscharow ist ein russischer Romanschriftsteller, dessen Werk für das Verständnis der russischen Literatur des 19. Jahrhunderts von entscheidender Bedeutung ist. Seine Schriften konzentrieren sich oft auf tiefe psychologische Charakterporträts und die Kritik gesellschaftlicher Normen. Gontscharow schildert meisterhaft die Innenwelten seiner Protagonisten und erforscht Themen wie Stagnation, moralischen Verfall und die Suche nach Sinn in einer sich wandelnden Gesellschaft. Seine stilistische Präzision und seine Fähigkeit, das Wesen der russischen Seele einzufangen, machen ihn zu einer bedeutenden Figur des literarischen Realismus.





First translation into English of an extraordinary document that lays bare the jealousies felt but rarely expressed by writers, and an eternal monument to literary paranoia.
The Same Old Story
- 385 Seiten
- 14 Lesestunden
"One summer in the village of Grachi, in the household of Anna Pavlovna Aduyevaya, a landowner of modest means, all it members, from the mistress herself down to Barbos, the watch dog, had risen with the dawn. The only exception was Aleksandr Fyodorich, Anna Pavlovna's son who, as befits a twenty-year-old, was sleeping the sleep of the just." Filled with dreams of pursuing a career as a poet, the young Alexander Aduev moves from the country to St Petersburg, where he takes up lodgings next to his uncle Pyotr, a shrewd and world-weary businessman. As his ideals are challenged by disappointment in the fields of love, friendship and poetical ambition, Alexander must decide whether to return to the homely values he has left behind or adapt to the ruthless rules and morals of city life. Told in the author's trademark humorous style and presented in a sparkling new translation by Stephen Pearl, The Same Old Story -- Goncharov's first novel, preceding his masterpiece Oblomov by twelve years -- is a study of lost illusions and rude spiritual awakening in the modern world.
First translation into English and further proof of the eclectic narrative skills of the celebrated author of Oblomov.