
Gazdarica / Bele noći / Netočka Nezvanova
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Crime and Punishment is a novel by Russian writer Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, published in 1866 in the journal Russian Herald. It is considered one of the greatest works of Russian literature. The plot is set in Saint Petersburg in the mid-1860s.
Both works reflect Dostoevsky's early phase, with a focus on social criticism, psychological analysis and moral dilemmas, foreshadowing the themes of his later masterpieces.
All the works published in this volume reflect Dostoevsky's ability to expose human frailties, social flaws and moral dilemmas through humor, satire and psychological depth, often with universal themes that still resonate today.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, the messenger of a lost generation, paints a portrait of the era between the two wars in this collection of eleven stories: hedonism that bites, moral decay that intoxicates, and youth that burns like fireworks.
Through these stories, Moravia explores themes of social inequality, the struggle for survival, and human frailty, portraying them with a mix of humor, irony, and realistic observation.
The third volume of Collected Works contains Chekhov's most extensive novella, "A Drama in Hunting," as well as a number of longer stories from the period 1885-1886. There are humoresques such as Silo in a Bag, Eh, That Audience, and A Lot of Paper, as we