タグ: ENG_Classics

  • “The Bell Jar” Sylvia Plath (1963) Review | Young woman and her uncertainty

    “The Bell Jar” Sylvia Plath (1963) Review | Young woman and her uncertainty

    The Bell Jar: A Timeless Coming-of-Age Classic (Perennial Classics) 
    The Bell Jar
    Sylvia Plath, 1963
    244 pages
    Read in 2026.03
    Check the synopsis and details on amazon.com
    ✔ A modern classic about a young woman and her uncertainty
    ✔ She seems to be successful, yet her mental health falls apart
    ✔ Though it's more than 60 years old still relevant

    ★★★★★ A summer job at a magazine in New York, all looks well yet nothing is going well. Modern classic coming of age novel about young women's fear and anger, still very relevant today.
    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽
    
    The famous, the classic.
    A young woman from a poor family studies hard and wins all prizes including a summer job at a magazine in New York.
    All looks well, except nothing was actually going well and she ends up in an institution. 
    
    I am glad I didn't read this in my 20s because I'm not sure if I could take it.
    Esther's fears are what any young women fear, and her anger, hopelessness, hatred, they are all familiar. 
    She's determined but if you let go one small rope, you lose yourself in the ocean.
    Seemingly successful doesn't always mean happiness.
    The author herself took her own life a few weeks after the publication. 
    
    It was written in the 60s so the world around these issues has changed, a bit, it's kinder now.
    But 60 years on, it's still not that crazy to feel how she felt.
    As long as there are girls in this world, this book will be read.
    
    
    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●
    The Bell Jar: A Timeless Coming-of-Age Classic (Perennial Classics)
    The Bell Jar: A Timeless Coming-of-Age Classic (Perennial Classics)



  • “Zen and Japanese culture” Daisetz T. Suzuki (1940) Review | Japanese means zen

    “Zen and Japanese culture” Daisetz T. Suzuki (1940) Review | Japanese means zen

    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)
    Zen and Japanese culture
    Daisetsu Suzuki, 1940
    Daisetz T. Suzuki
    禅と日本文化
    鈴木大拙
    Read in 2024.4
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    ✔ Classic book introducing Zen to the US and the West
    ✔ Academic and religious take on Zen for non-Japanese
    ✔ A starting point for those serious about learning Japanese culture


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★★ A classic book on Japan and Zen. Zen is so ubiquitous in Japan that being Japanese means Zen. It was written for the Western audience so it's explained logically. A real starting point to study Japanese culture.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    It was a collection of lectures on zen by Daisetsu Suzuki in 1938, first published in English and in 1940 it was translated to Japanese.
    This book remains as a very important source for anyone who's interested in Japan and zen - in a serious way.
    Today, "I love Japan" is something I hear so much that it basically has no meaning - unless they can name a few real Japanese things.

    Anyway, it might be difficult to read in a sense that it's old, but because it was for the Western audience explanations are logical so in that sense it's easier to understand, even for Japanese today.

    It's not an introduction to zen as such, but if you are truly interested in zen and Google search won't help you much, then this is the book to turn to.
    When a book on zen is for Japanese audience (and if it's translated to other languages) it tries to make you "read the room" to grasp the idea of zen.
    On a separate note. Interestingly, there's an argument (elsewhere, not this book) that because in Japan, zen or Buddhism is indeed "in the air", you cannot shut it off so that is why Japanese people don't need to feel strongly about being Buddhist or religious or spiritual it's part of their lives anyway, many Japanese will declare that they are not religious.
    However, in places like US, Christianity is not "in the air", you must go to the church to feel it, so they feel strongly about being Christian or religious, or not.

    Zen is intuitive, it is not something you explain through theories, but with ink painting or haiku, even tea ceremony or garden.
    Minimalism and the love of the nature, that spirit is naturally in Japanese arts and lifestyles, therefore being Japanese is being zen.

    It's true, I do feel that it's true, I want to it to be forever true, but, I am not sure if it continues to be true.

    It is the Japan that hundreds of thousands of foreign tourists fantasise, but isn't it the Japan that only exists in our naïve imaginations?
    The rapid economical growth of the 90s is in the past, and the people of that generation worked hard to aim for better lives, more luxury, better education for their kids - admittingly something that is far from zen.
    Today, young people in Japan do not believe that their lives would get better when they grow up.
    Frankly they are not interested. They don't want more stuff, and they don't need more.
    So, are we going back to zen?
    Does that mean, after all, we come back to the statement that, yes, being Japanese means being zen?
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)
    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Lo Zen e la cultura giapponese
    Lo Zen e la cultura giapponese (Italiano)


  • “Representative men of Japan” Kanzo Uchimura, 1908 Review | A resistance from this Christian Japanese author

    “Representative men of Japan” Kanzo Uchimura, 1908 Review | A resistance from this Christian Japanese author


    "Representative men of Japan" from Japan and the Japanese
    Kanzo Uchimura, 1894 and 1908
    代表的日本人
    内村鑑三
    Read in 2024.4
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    🔽 Intro and review summary 🔽

    ✔ History and biography of Japanese individuals
    ✔ Nationalism at the turn of the century
    ✔ Christian Japanese author

    ★★★★☆ At the turn of the century the wave of Westernisation was unstoppable. This book was a resistance from this Christian Japanese author, to claim that Japan was also great. A bit too subjective but the real value of this book is the intention of the author.

    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    It was originally written under the title of "Japan and the Japanese" in 1894, then released again as "Representative Men of Japan in 1908.
    You get the idea how nationalistic the intention was.

    Important fact is that he was a Christian evangelist, who founded Non-church Movement, seeking to reconcile Japan and Christianity.

    At the turn of the century, the West has ruined Asia and the wave of Westernisation was unstoppable.
    This book was a resistance from this Christian Japanese author, to claim that Japan was also great.

    As it turns out, a lot in this book is subjective.
    Each chapter starts off by introducing how Japan is doing in the particular field, and goes on to say how each man is great and Japanese are wonderful.
    The first man in the book is Takamori Saigo, and the book goes a bit extreme to praise his idea that Japan should conquer Korea, Seikanron, which I felt uncomfortable, but then I read in the afterword that Uchimura soon later became anti-war so those comments were just left over from his older belief.
    Today he is remembered as a pacifist (so it feels weird he had agreed on seikanron, but there you go people can change)

    So, it is a bit too subjective and very specific to this particular period of time in Japan to actually learn any history of Japan or these Japanese men.
    However what's more important and interesting, indeed the value of this book, is the intention of the author, why he wrote it in this way, how he wished Japan to be equal to European powers and how that was the aim of many intellectuals from this period.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Representative men of Japan


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Representative Men of Japan Kindle Edition

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    --



  • ”Animal Farm” George Orwell, (1945) Review | Have we learned? No

    ”Animal Farm” George Orwell, (1945) Review | Have we learned? No


    Animal Farm
    George Orwell, 1945
    124 pages
    Read in 2024.4
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    🔽 Intro and review summary 🔽

    ✔ Classic fable on politics
    ✔ Every time you read you learn something new
    ✔ Russian revolution and totalitarianism

    ★★★★☆ Classic of the classics. I knew more or less the content but was surprised how short it was. It's short, with clear messages, but have we learned? No.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    The classic.
    It's more or less as I expected but much shorter.

    With a very clear and obvious message, it would be easy for even younger readers to understand.
    This edition had a lot of explanations like a textbook, which compares the characters with the historical figures.

    Do we learn? No, we don't, we keep making the same mistakes.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Animal Farm: 75th Anniversary Edition


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Animal Farm: New Edition of Orwell's Brilliant Political Satire (Polygon Classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●

    La fattoria degli animali (Italiano)


  • “Aphorisms of love and hate” Frederick Nietzsche (1878) Review | Aphorisms we’d understand uncomfortably

    “Aphorisms of love and hate” Frederick Nietzsche (1878) Review | Aphorisms we’d understand uncomfortably

    aphorism
    Aphorisms of love and hate
    (Extract from "Human, All Too Human")
    Frederick Nietzsche, 1878
    55 pages
    Read in 2024.5
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    🔽 Intro and review summary 🔽

    Extract from "Human, All Too Human"
    ✔ Selection of aphorisms on human relationship
    ✔ Strangely entertaining and uplifting


    ★★★★★ A very short book from Penguin (extract from Human, All Too Human) Everything here is something we'd all recognise but maybe not able to put into words. e.g. "Love must be learned, so must be hatred"

    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A very short book from Penguin (extract from Human, All Too Human)
    It contains short phrases, sometimes just a line, on a lot of points about human relations.
    From revenge, pity, marriage, love to hatred, and to my big surprise it has a lot of humour.

    Everything here is something we'd all recognise but maybe not able to put into words.
    "Love must be learned, so must be hatred" or "marriage will work if they don't live together" "Shared joy makes a friend" - if I were to underline all the interesting points, the whole book will be underlined. Now I want to read the actual book, one day soon.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●
    aphorism
    [(Aphorisms on Love and Hate)] [Author: Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche]


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Aphorisms on Love and Hate (Penguin Little Black Classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●

  • “The Sorrows of Young Werther” J W von Goethe, (1774) Review | Self pity is full on

    “The Sorrows of Young Werther” J W von Goethe, (1774) Review | Self pity is full on


    The Sorrows of Young Werther
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1774
    Die Leiden des jungen Werthers
    Germany
    144 pages
    Read in 2024.5
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    🔽 Intro and review summary 🔽

    ✔ Classic of German literature
    ✔ Broken heart and friendship
    ✔ Sorrowful, self destructive

    ★★★★☆ A classic that everyone has heard of, and it is more than I had imagined, full of sorrows yes but the self pity is full on. A universal feeling of despair we all feel at some point in life.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A classic that everyone has heard of, and it is more than I had imagined, full of sorrows yes but the self pity is full on.
    Maybe it feels different if you read it when you're young, or definitely if you read it in the 18th century.

    This is the original version of all the sad love stories that came about since.
    You're in love, you misunderstand the affection, you suffer, you're in love with your suffering and it is far stronger than yourself and you can't take it any more.
    A universal feeling of despair we all feel at some point in life.

    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    The Sorrows of Young Werther


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    The Sorrows of Young Werther

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    I dolori del giovane Werther (Italiano)
  • “Pride and Prejudice” Jane Austen (1813) Review | How to humiliate a rich guy and marry him

    “Pride and Prejudice” Jane Austen (1813) Review | How to humiliate a rich guy and marry him

    jane austin
    Pride and Prejudice
    Jane Austen, 1813
    367 pages
    Read in 2025.01
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com
    ✔ Classic love story that's constantly referenced
    ✔ Jane Austen's masterpiece on womanhood
    ✔ Love story and class struggles


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★★ How to humiliate a rich guy and to marry him in the end. What a girl. It's such a classic that it's difficult to find a love story that's not influenced by this.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    The classic of the classics.
    The story is well known, but it is true the humour in the dialogues makes this the "best loved book"
    So very English, both in the lifestyle and humour.
    The characters are lively, the story simple but curious and anyone can easily engage with it.
    It's so iconic that it's now difficult to find any love story that has no reference to this book.
    I should also watch the movies properly one day.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●
    jane austin
    Pride and Prejudice (Penguin Classics) Paperback


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    pride and prejudice
    Pride and Prejudice: Jane Austen (Penguin Clothbound Classics) Hardcover – Illustrated


    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●

    Pride and Prejudice Paperback – English edition


    Orgoglio e pregiudizio
    Orgoglio e pregiudizio - Paperback
     
  • “Robinson Crusoe” Daniel Defoe (1719) Review | Classic of classics

    “Robinson Crusoe” Daniel Defoe (1719) Review | Classic of classics


    Robinson Crusoe
    The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe
    Daniel Defoe, 1719
    384 pages
    Read in 2024.6
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    ✔ Classic story for children and grownups
    ✔ Victorian Englishman's sentiments
    ✔ Adventures on a remote island


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★☆ Classic of classics. Mr. Crusoe is so English. He's tidy, proud and concerned, and determined to make this barbarian land his home (English style home, of course)


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽
    This was a period I was reading as many "classics" as possible, and here it is.

    It's amazing how English the protagonist is.
    He's so well organised and no compromise to make the island his (English style) home, and he doesn't hide to show how proud he is.

    This is supposed to be one of the first story written as if it was a biography in spoken English, and indeed many thought it was a biography, a diary.
    Because of the historical background you cannot get away from the discriminations but within the boundary he made a sincere friend of Friday.
    Today's reader would be uncomfortable, and when recommended to kids I hope there's a note mentioning it.

    Whether you like it or not, you'd have to conclude that it is a great story, written 300 years ago, and still read today.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Robinson Crusoe: The Original 1719 Edition (A Daniel Defoe Classic Novel)


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Robinson Crusoe

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Le avventure di Robinson Crusoe (Italiano)
  • “Ten Italian Folktales” Italo Calvino (1956) Review | Misfortunes and cruelties

    “Ten Italian Folktales” Italo Calvino (1956) Review | Misfortunes and cruelties


    Ten Italian Folktales
    Italo Calvino, 1956
    Fiabe italiane
    96 pages
    Read in 2024.6
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    ✔ Extract from a bigger collection
    ✔ Some are cruel and violent folktales


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★☆☆ Extracts of a bigger collection of the folktales, "Fiabe italiane" written originally in 1956. A lot of misfortunes and a fair amount of cruelties, just like any folktales. Need to read the main book one day.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    Extracts of a bigger collection of the folktales, “Fiabe italiane” written originally in 1956.

    They are short and some have moral teaching, like the last one Jump into my sack.
    But the rest are tales and some just justify rapes, like sleeping with an unconscious queen and he becomes a king…

    A lot of misfortunes and a fair amount of cruelty, just like any folktales.

     

    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Ten Italian Folktales (Penguin 60s S.)


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Ten Italian Folktales Paperback

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Fiabe italiane (Italiano)
  • “The Prince” Niccolò Machiavelli (1532) Review | Focus, be cruel, rule

    “The Prince” Niccolò Machiavelli (1532) Review | Focus, be cruel, rule


    The Prince
    Niccolò Machiavelli, 1532
    Il principe
    128 pages
    Read in 2024.11
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    ✔ Guidebook to be a ruler in 1500s Europe
    ✔ Machiavelli, Renaissance man
    ✔ Still read by many leaders today


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★☆☆ A "quintessentially Renaissance man". This is a guidebook on how to be a good ruler in 1500s Italy. Focus, be cruel, rule. Scary this is still loved by many.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    Alma classics, a version that was translated and published in 2009

    So this is a guidebook on how to be a good ruler in 1500s Italy.
    It has many connotations but clearly it is wrong to try to apply this to all leaders or all societies.

    It does recommend to focus on the ruling and go cruel, but it was probably what was needed back then.
    And the words are straightforward, and references a lot to the history especially the Roman empire.
    And gives practical advices on how to behave.
    As they say, a quintessentially Renaissance man.

    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    The Prince | Niccolò Machiavelli

    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    The Prince: Niccolo Machiavelli

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Il principe

  • “A season in hell” Arthur Rimbaud (1873) Review | Pure and genius

    “A season in hell” Arthur Rimbaud (1873) Review | Pure and genius


    A season in hell
    Arthur Rimbaud, 1873
    Une saison en enfer
    96 pages
    Read in 2024.6
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    ✔ Collection of poem
    ✔ Masterpiece from the great French poet
    ✔ LGBTQ, heart broken


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★☆ He wrote it after the hellish travel with his lover, a self destructive man, a full of self pity and frustrations. True you should read this while drunk and preferably in the night.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽
    A poem of youth in pain. It's true you should read this while drunk and preferably in the night.
    Not in the Mediterranean summer daytime.

    He wrote it after the hellish travel with his lover, a self destructive man, and this is as the title suggests, a full of self pity and frustrations.

    Would have felt differently if read in different occasions for sure.

    Penguin classic 60, this version translated in 1962.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    A Season in Hell & The Drunken Boat


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    A Season In Hell

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Una stagione all'inferno
  • “The Sound and the Fury” William Faulkner (1929) Review | A difficult read but a masterpiece

    “The Sound and the Fury” William Faulkner (1929) Review | A difficult read but a masterpiece


    The Sound and the Fury
    William Faulkner, 1929
    464 pages
    Read in 2024.7
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    ✔ American classic
    ✔ Various points of view of the same incidents
    ✔ Life of Southern US at the turn of the century


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★★ A difficult read, difficult to understand what's actually happening, but once you get a hang of it, and with a bit of research it's gripping. Must read this again, now that I know the plot.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A difficult read.
    The first chapter is written from the perspective of a disabled man, who is the fourth child of the family and it's not chronological, things come up as they come up in his mind, jumping around the time and repeating the same things, repeating his love for his sister.
    Then it goes to the first son's perspective, then the second son's, then ends with no first-person narrator and concludes how the family has collapses.

    Throughout the book things go back and forth and there is little explanation of what's actually happening or who's speaking, as if you are reading from the character's mind so you're supposed to follow with no description of events.

    Though it's difficult, and I needed a synopsis from Wikipedia, it is gripping once you get a hang of it.
    Unique, for sure, and it's a sad story of a proud but dysfunctional family.
    Must read this again, now that I know the plot.

    NOBEL PRIZE WINNER
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    The Sound and the Fury: The Corrected Text


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    The Sound and the Fury (Vintage classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    L'urlo e il furore (Italiano)
  • “Dracula” Bram Stoker (1897 Review | Unexpected female empowerment

    “Dracula” Bram Stoker (1897 Review | Unexpected female empowerment



    Dracula
    Bram Stoker, 1897
    352 pages
    Read 2024.8
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com

    🔽 Intro and review summary 🔽

    ✔ Classic horror and monster story
    ✔ Adventure, quest and masculinity, but somehow fragile
    Unexpected female empowerment

    ★★★★★ Who doesn’t know Dracula? But so the threat is in the town and awakens intelligence and sexuality in women, and men go out to destroy. Definitely playing with female sexuality and empowerment.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    The classic of the classics, who doesn’t know Dracula?

    The entire novel is written as if it were collection of diaries, notes and letters.
    In a way surprisingly to me that it was full of pure adventures, good guys chasing the bad guy to save woman.
    But it is the woman who became the victim because of the men’s heroism and she saves their asses.
    Also if you read between the lines, it’s sexual, or bisexual even. Dracula likes the blood of young beautiful women, but he also imprisoned Jonathan and attempted to attack him also.

    So, the threat is in the town and it brings about the awakening of women to their intelligence and sexuality, so the 4 men go out to hunt. That’s one way to look at it but certainly it’s playing a lot with the idea if female sexuality and empowerment.

    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Dracula (Penguin Classics)


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Dracula: Stoker Bram (Penguin Classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Dracula (Italiano)
  • “Blood wedding” Federico García Lorca (1932) Review | Honour and revenge

    “Blood wedding” Federico García Lorca (1932) Review | Honour and revenge


    Blood wedding
    Federico García Lorca, 1932
    Bodas de sangre
    Spain
    80 pages
    Read in 2024.09
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    ✔ Tragedy written for theatres
    ✔ Mediterranean life and society
    ✔ Honour and revenge


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★☆ A very Mediterranean story. Struggle of lovers and mothers, and the men who live and die for honour and revenge. One day hopefully on a stage.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽
    It's a lot shorter than I thought, it's a play that's considered the classic and has powerful emotions.
    It's the wild emotions of the lovers and mother, it's the cry of those who lost loved ones in the Mediterranean countryside where honour and revenge are the purpose of living, and worth dying for.

    It's most definitely to be enjoyed as a theatre piece so reading it might not be the best experience of it and of course translation might lose its true colour, but being so short it felt like I needed more for me to go deeper into it.
    So yes on a stage one day.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Blood Wedding: A Play (Faber Drama)


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Lorca: Three Plays (Blood Wedding, Yerma, The House of Bernarda Alba) (NHB Drama Classics) (Drama Classic Collections)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Nozze di sangue (Italiano)
  • “The Overcoat” Nikolai Gogol (1842) Review | Life is unfair

    “The Overcoat” Nikolai Gogol (1842) Review | Life is unfair


    The Overcoat
    Nikolai Gogol, 1842
    Шине́ль
    Russia
    112 pages
    Read in 2024.10
    check synopsis and details on amazon.com


    ✔ Russian classic tragedy
    ✔ Life of a simple officer
    ✔ Russian bureaucracy and frustration


    🔽 Review summary 🔽

    ★★★★☆ Life is not fair. A tragedy but also a sad comedy. Russian literature is bottomless. A man saves money for ages and buys a new coat, and it gets stolen. Regardless of time and society we live in, we share the anger and desperation.


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    Short stories of the famous Gogol.
    You do see a lot of Dostoyevsky in his stories, that the life is unfair, and stories are tragedies yet sadly comical.

    Written in this period in Russia, the stories are critical of the bureaucracy and of higher ranked officials.
    A regular official saves up to get an overcoat and gets robbed, it's simple as that, and though it's keeping it subtle it is fully miserable, and universal, we totally understand how the protagonist is feeling at every stage of the story.

    The story is ridiculous yet believable, and again universal.
    Russian literature is bottomless.
    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    The Overcoat and Other Stories


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    The Overcoat and Other Short Stories (Thrift Editions)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Il cappotto (Italiano)