In August
"In the August" | |
---|---|
Short story by Ivan Bunin | |
Original title | В августе |
Country | Russia |
Language | Russian |
Publication | |
Published in | Russkaya mysl |
Publication date | 1901 |
In The August was a short story by a Nobel Prize-winning Russian author Ivan Bunin first published in Russkaya mysl 1901, #8, August issue.[citation needed]
History
Bunin was working upon the story for a long time. After the magazine publication he prepared the text for Pereval anthology, and in it cut several fragments, notably description of a provincial town at noon. The story contained autobiographical elements. A visit to Tolstoyans, a walk over an old Malorossia town, in which Poltava can easily be guessed, a romantic relations with a girl. Tolstoyans described here had their prototypes; Pavlovsky mentioned there was Drozhin, a village teacher who died in 1892 after serving in a disciplinarian battalion for his refusal to serve in the army (as describe in The Life of Bunin, p. 85)
Several scenes and details of the story Bunin used in Chapter 27 of Part V of The Life of Arseniev.[1]
References
- ^ Иван Алексеевич Бунин. Собрание сочинений. Том 1. Повести и рассказы, 1912-1917. Изд. Художественная литература, 1965. Комментарии. 514.
External links
- An omnibus collection of Bunin's short fiction at Standard Ebooks
- v
- t
- e
- Meliton (1901)
- Dreams (1904)
- The Village (1910)
- Dry Valley (1912)
- Mitya's Love (1924)
- The Life of Arseniev (1927–1933)
- "Antonovka Apples" (1900)
- "In August" (1901)
- "The Gentleman from San Francisco" (1916)
- "Loopy Ears" (1917)
- Bird's Shadow (1931)
- Dark Avenues (1937–1953)
- Cursed Days (1925–1926)
- About Chekhov (1955)
This article about a short story (or stories) published in the 1900s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e