Common Story

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Ivan Goncharov 1906
English
  • Preface by Edmund Gosse
  • Chapter 01, pt. 1
  • Chapter 01, pt. 2
  • Chapter 01, pt. 3
  • Chapter 02, pt. 1
  • Chapter 02, pt. 2
  • Chapter 02, pt. 3
  • Chapter 02, pt. 4
  • Chapter 02, pt. 5
  • Chapter 03, pt. 1
  • Chapter 03, pt. 2
  • Chapter 04, pt. 1
  • Chapter 04, pt. 2
  • Chapter 05, pt. 1
  • Chapter 05, pt. 2
  • Chapter 05, pt. 3
  • Chapter 05, pt. 4
  • Chapter 06, pt 1
  • Chapter 06, pt. 2
  • Chapter 07, pt. 1
  • Chapter 07, pt. 2
  • Chapter 08
  • Chapter 09, pt. 1
  • Chapter 09, pt. 2
  • Chapter 09, pt. 3
  • Chapter 10, pt. 1
  • Chapter 10, pt. 2
  • Chapter 10, pt. 3
  • Chapter 11, pt. 1
  • Chapter 11, pt. 2
  • Chapter 12, pt. 1
  • Chapter 12, pt. 2
  • Chapter 12, pt. 3
  • Epilogue, pt. 1
  • Epilogue, pt. 2
Alexander Fedoritch Adouev is the naïve, pampered son of Anna Pavlovna, a provincial landowner. He decides to go off to Saint Petersburg, not only to make his mark upon society but also to fulfill his two rosy romantic dreams of becoming a great writer and finding a great love. He is taken under the reluctant wing of his uncle, Piotr Ivanitch Adouev, a pragmatic, hard-headed businessman who scorns everything romantic and tries to cure Alexander Fedoritch of his sentimental, youthful illusions. The younger Adouev resists the indoctrinations of the elder, writing prosaic articles about manure and crop rotation for an agricultural journal as a way of supporting himself but spending his nights writing passionate works of poetry and drama. In quest of True Love, he pursues in turn the rustic Sophia, the perfidious Nadinka, the melancholy Julia, the spright-like Liza, and even (implicitly) the wise and beautiful Lizaveta, who has entered into a loveless marriage with Alexander’s own unsentimental uncle. The great question throughout the novel is whether Alexander can make a life balanced between pragmatism and romanticism, or be sacrificed to one or the other. Not a “superfluous man” in the same sense as Gontcharov’s later famous protagonist Oblomov, Alexander Fedoritch Adouev remains a noteworthy creation, a sympathetic, three-dimensional character in the early years of Russian realism. ( Expatriate)

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