Alexander Pushkin

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    7 best short stories by Alexander Pushkin

    Alexander Pushkin

    Welcome to the 7 Best Short Stories book series, were we present to you the best works of remarkable authors. This edition is dedicated to Alexander Pushkin. <br /> <br /> Alexander Pushkin was a Russian poet and writer who is considered the father of the modern Russian novel. The so-called Golden Age of Russian Literature was inspired by the themes and aesthetics of Pushkin – we are talking about names like Ivan Turgenev, Ivan Goncharov, Leo Tolstoy, Mikhail Lermontov, Nikolai Gogol. <br /> <br /> This book contains: <br /> – The Queen of Spades. <br /> – The Shot. <br /> – The Snowstorm. <br /> – The Postmaster. <br /> – The Coffin-maker. <br /> – Kirdjali. <br /> – Peter, The Great's Negro. <br /> <br /> If you appreciate good literature, be sure to check out the other Tacet Books titles!

    Boris Godunov

    Alexander Pushkin

    "Boris Godunov" by Alexander Pushkin (translated by Alfred Hayes). Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format.

    Das Golden Fisch und der Altäre. Deutsch

    Alexander Pushkin

    Das Märchen glich über das GoldFish Niere das Nacht ist. Guten Es. Den Märchen bester der Wörtern der Sammler-Herr Alexander Pushkin in zu Sies Regieren auf Ich Katy Zueva gezeichnete.

    The Queen of Spades, The Captain's Daughter and Other Stories

    Alexander Pushkin

    By the time Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) was twenty years old, he was already being recognized in the Russian literary scene as a great talent. He was born in Moscow and educated at home and at the Lyceum, studying Latin and eighteenth century French literature. Often seen as the founder of modern Russian literature and the first important Russian Poet, Pushkin's early works spoke largely to social reform which resulted in his exile to southern Russia until 1826; however, he continued to write unabated for his entire life. His poems and plays incorporated elements of drama, romance and satire that would from then on be associated with Russian literature, and his short stories are deemed by some to be the perfect Romantic tales. This collection of short stories begins with his finest prose story, «The Queen of Spades,» and includes «The Captain's Daughter,» «The Lady Rustic,» «The Pistol-Shot,» «The Snow-Storm,» «The Undertaker,» «The Station-Master,» and «The Moor of Peter the Great.»

    The Queen of Spades, the Captain's Daughter and Other Stories

    Alexander Pushkin

    By the time Alexander Pushkin was twenty years old, he was already being recognized in the Russian literary scene as a great talent. He was born in Moscow and educated at home and at the Lyceum, studying Latin and eighteenth century French literature. Often seen as the founder of modern Russian literature and the first important Russian Poet, Pushkin’s early works spoke largely to social reform which resulted in his exile to southern Russia until 1826; however, he continued to write unabated for his entire life. His poems and plays incorporated elements of drama, romance and satire that would from then on be associated with Russian literature, and his short stories are deemed by some to be the perfect Romantic tales. This collection of short stories begins with his finest prose story, “The Queen of Spades”, and also includes “The Captain's Daughter”, “The Lady Rustic”, “The Pistol-Shot”, “The Snow-Storm”, “The Undertaker”, “The Station-Master”, and “The Moor of Peter the Great”.

    Eugene Onegin (Translated by Henry Spalding)

    Alexander Pushkin

    Set in first part of the 18th century in imperialist Russia, “Eugene Onegin” is a novel in verse, first published serially in 1825, which follows the destiny of its titular character. Eugene is a dandy, whose life involves nothing more than the social whirl of St. Petersburg, with which he has become increasingly bored. When a wealthy uncle dies he inherits a substantial fortune and a country estate where he promptly moves for a change of scenery. There he befriends his neighbor, a young, idealistic, and naive, poet named Vladimir Lensky. After attending an invitation to dinner at the home of the family of Lensky’s fiancée, Olga Larina, Eugene becomes acquainted with her younger sister Tatyana. In a letter, Tatyana confesses that she is romantically drawn to Eugene however he rebuffs her advances confessing that he would only grow bored with her after a time, a decision that he would later come to regret. Tragically suspenseful, lively, and skillfully rendered, “Eugene Onegin” has proven to be not only the favorite work of its author, but a classic of Russian literature, widely acknowledged as Alexander Pushkin’s masterpiece. This edition follows the translation of Henry Spalding.

    The Queen of Spades and Other Stories

    Alexander Pushkin

    Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837), Russia&#8217;s greatest poet and a versatile writer whose great gifts and profoundly Russian sensibility influenced all of modern Russian literature, produced short stories that are masterpieces of the craft.Besides the brilliant title story, a cunningly wrought narrative of romance and murder in the haute bourgeoisie of St. Petersburg, this volume includes all five stories originally collected as The Tales of the Late P. Belkin. These include «An Amateur Peasant Girl,» «The Shot,» «The Snowstorm,» «The Postmaster,» and «The Coffin-Maker.»

    Boris Godunov and the Little Tragedies

    Alexander Pushkin

    Boris Godunov recounts the tragic conflict between Tsar Boris and the pretender Dimitri. Following the death of Ivan the Terrible, Boris Godunov became regent for the feeble-minded Tsar Fyodor, the heir to whose throne, the boy-prince Dimitri, died mysteriously in 1591. It was widely rumoured that Boris had murdered him, and when a renegade monk later appeared claiming to be Dimitri, he rapidly became a focus for revolt. The four other plays in this volume belong to Pushkin's Little Tragedies . They are A Feast in Time of Plague , The Miserly Knight , Mozart and Salieri and The Stone Guest .