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Original Title: Дама с собачкой
Series: Vientos del Pueblo
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Dama s psičkom (Vientos del Pueblo) Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 126 pages
Rating: 3.8 | 4596 Users | 268 Reviews

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Title:Dama s psičkom (Vientos del Pueblo)
Author:Anton Chekhov
Book Format:Mass Market Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 126 pages
Published:September 1995
Categories:Short Stories. Classics. Fiction. Cultural. Russia. Literature. Russian Literature

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“The Lady with the Dog” is a 1899 short story by Anton Chekhov. It is one of his most renowned and highly valued works.

It tells a story of an adulterous affair between Dmitri Gurow, who is a bank worker from Moscow, and Anna Sergeyevna. Both of them are married and have arrived in an unnamed provincial city for a holiday.

Despite the love they feel to each other, they have to part when the lady goes back home.

However, Gurov fings himself unable to forget her even in his routine and searches for an opportunity to meer her.

Rating Of Books Dama s psičkom (Vientos del Pueblo)
Ratings: 3.8 From 4596 Users | 268 Reviews

Rate Of Books Dama s psičkom (Vientos del Pueblo)
Send For Me by Atlantic StarrI first read this story years ago as a part of The Portable Chekhov and decided to read this story again on its own. This story looks on it's surface like another "forbidden-love" story, but its power is in how it breaks down this situation. A man who is becoming middle-aged and has to decide whether he is going to be a cold-hearted playboy or decide to let someone in his heart finally. A woman (with a dog) is in one of those typical 19th century loveless marriages

"Experience often repeated, truly bitter experience, had taught him long ago thatevery intimacy, which at first so agreeably diversifies life and appears light and charming adventure, inevitably grows into a regular problem of extreme intricacy, and in the long run the situation becomes unbearable. But at every fresh meeting with an interesting woman this experience seemed to slip out of his memory, and he was eager for life, and everything seemed simple and amusing." If you like Chekhov's

There are many bits of truth in this story and lots of good sentences, but to my experience, this story seems to misunderstand real love.

"Useless pursuits and conversations always about the same things absorb the better part of one's time, the better part of one's strength."Chekhov writes such interesting, complex characters, who develop and change, who have moments of epiphany. Along with that, he has a way of writing that compels the reader to go on, ask questions and speculate. I did not like Gurov at the beginning; I did not know what to think of him by the end.

With Chekhov forget about the complex plots and the outward excitement and CONCENTRATE on the apparent trivialities of the daily life of ordinary Russian people, just like you and me.Probing below the surface, Chekhov lays bare the character's inner structure and their secret motives. Fair enough that he compensates the lack of action with an internal drama!The story overshadows an adulterous affair between Dmitri Gurov (a creature of contradictions) An attractive man, near forty from the upper

it seemed to them that fate itself had meant them for one another, and they could not understand why he had a wife and she a husband; and it was as though they were a pair of birds of passage, caught and forced to live in different cages. They forgave each other for what they wereashamed of in their past, they forgave everything in the present, and felt that this love of theirs had changed them both.

Harmless.What's that you say? Too harsh?OK.Mostly harmless. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

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