The Village (1910) is Bunin's unsparing panorama of provincial Russia, following the peasant brothers Tikhon and Kuzma through labor, drink, violence, and thwarted hope while the 1905 unrest flickers at the margins. In chiselled, economical prose that blends late-Realist precision with Naturalist determinism, Bunin builds an episodic social anatomy; landscapes, luminous yet indifferent, counterpoint the villagers' brutality and endurance. Born in 1870 to an impoverished Oryol gentry family, Bunin grew up on declining estates, observing peasants without populist filters. A poet and master stylist who revered Tolstoy's clarity yet rejected peasant idealization, he drew on journalism and travel to hone an unsentimental gaze. Written after 1905, the novel codifies his belief that political slogans scarcely reach the village's entrenched misery, hence its scandal on release. This is essential reading for anyone seeking a clear-eyed counterweight to pastoral myth. Students of pre-revolutionary culture, admirers of Chekhovian understatement tempered by iron, and readers who value style as truth will find it bracing and memorable. Approach it for its artistry; stay for its uncompromising moral witness. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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