The Wide World: 1895
A tale of adventure, a coming-of-age novel and a biography of immigrant experience—THE WIDE WORLD is all of the above in one exciting, action-packed volume. Written for both young and old readers back in 1895, the Russian master, Vladimir Korolenko, traces the life’s journey of his strong, broad-shouldered hero, Matvei Lozinsky, from a remote village I n Ukraine to the churning existence of Gilded Age New York. Mystifying, intimidating, sometimes even threatening, immigrant trials and tribulations test the mettle of this upright young man with a luxuriant beard who doesn’t know a single word of English. His troubles begin in the great German immigrant port of Hamburg when he and his lively sidekick, Puff, miss the right boat and find themselves on one that almost collides with an iceberg. All turns out well: the young travelers dance on deck, and Matvei meets and falls in love with beautiful Anna. Freedom is the magnet; the friends know too little of it back in their homeland. Is it just because the great statue in New York harbor greets new immigrants, or something more? Matvei, Puff, and Anna disembark and think they’ve come not so much to a new country as to a new planet. The streets are filled with rushing crowds doing incomprehensible things. Incessant noise assaults the newcomers—steamship whistles, clanking trolleys, trains thundering along the famous Elevated—all so unlike the peaceful village sounds they knew. Church steeples are the highest points of the 19th century landscape, but the other structures—the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, the El—all newly built—bear down upon them. Fortunately, they have some help—good advice and even better examples of the new life—from a kindly Jewish family that runs a boarding house where they settle. There’s worse to come though. Puff succumbs to Tammany Hall corruption, and Anna and Matvei tie in with a nasty, expatriate Russian noblewoman. Intrepid Matvei even stares down a wolf in Central Park—that after becoming a homeless wanderer in the teeming melting pot of immigrant New York. He blunders upon and disrupts a rally of the city’s unemployed led by the famed 19th century labor leader Samuel Gompers. Matvei is cursed with notoriety because of the episode and pictures of the mysterious “giant” which had appeared on the front pages of all the newspapers. He clashes with the police and is rescued by a band of intrepid Italian compatriots. Placed in a train headed west, the city left behind, replaced by an American countryside that seems familiar, Matvei’s view of the new land begins to change. Judge Dick Dickinson gives him a new understanding of American law, and he comes to know Nilov, an idealistic Russian immigrant. His hopes of immigration and his experience of freedom come to be realized. AUTHOR: In Russia, Vladimir Galaktinovich Korolenko has an honored place in the great pantheon of 19th century Russian literature. Born in Zhitomir, Ukraine, the son of a judge, he was never a member of a political party but always had the worldview of a populist. He was exiled to Siberia three times, the first as a student at the Moscow Forestry Institute. A fearless Publicist and prolific literary figure, he became known as a champion of the oppressed. During the Beili’s Case, Tsarist Russia’s version of the Dreyfus Affair, he served as the successful advocate for exoneration. The translator Stanley Harrison taught Russian at Cornell University during the Cold War. He is retired.
1100372374
The Wide World: 1895
A tale of adventure, a coming-of-age novel and a biography of immigrant experience—THE WIDE WORLD is all of the above in one exciting, action-packed volume. Written for both young and old readers back in 1895, the Russian master, Vladimir Korolenko, traces the life’s journey of his strong, broad-shouldered hero, Matvei Lozinsky, from a remote village I n Ukraine to the churning existence of Gilded Age New York. Mystifying, intimidating, sometimes even threatening, immigrant trials and tribulations test the mettle of this upright young man with a luxuriant beard who doesn’t know a single word of English. His troubles begin in the great German immigrant port of Hamburg when he and his lively sidekick, Puff, miss the right boat and find themselves on one that almost collides with an iceberg. All turns out well: the young travelers dance on deck, and Matvei meets and falls in love with beautiful Anna. Freedom is the magnet; the friends know too little of it back in their homeland. Is it just because the great statue in New York harbor greets new immigrants, or something more? Matvei, Puff, and Anna disembark and think they’ve come not so much to a new country as to a new planet. The streets are filled with rushing crowds doing incomprehensible things. Incessant noise assaults the newcomers—steamship whistles, clanking trolleys, trains thundering along the famous Elevated—all so unlike the peaceful village sounds they knew. Church steeples are the highest points of the 19th century landscape, but the other structures—the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, the El—all newly built—bear down upon them. Fortunately, they have some help—good advice and even better examples of the new life—from a kindly Jewish family that runs a boarding house where they settle. There’s worse to come though. Puff succumbs to Tammany Hall corruption, and Anna and Matvei tie in with a nasty, expatriate Russian noblewoman. Intrepid Matvei even stares down a wolf in Central Park—that after becoming a homeless wanderer in the teeming melting pot of immigrant New York. He blunders upon and disrupts a rally of the city’s unemployed led by the famed 19th century labor leader Samuel Gompers. Matvei is cursed with notoriety because of the episode and pictures of the mysterious “giant” which had appeared on the front pages of all the newspapers. He clashes with the police and is rescued by a band of intrepid Italian compatriots. Placed in a train headed west, the city left behind, replaced by an American countryside that seems familiar, Matvei’s view of the new land begins to change. Judge Dick Dickinson gives him a new understanding of American law, and he comes to know Nilov, an idealistic Russian immigrant. His hopes of immigration and his experience of freedom come to be realized. AUTHOR: In Russia, Vladimir Galaktinovich Korolenko has an honored place in the great pantheon of 19th century Russian literature. Born in Zhitomir, Ukraine, the son of a judge, he was never a member of a political party but always had the worldview of a populist. He was exiled to Siberia three times, the first as a student at the Moscow Forestry Institute. A fearless Publicist and prolific literary figure, he became known as a champion of the oppressed. During the Beili’s Case, Tsarist Russia’s version of the Dreyfus Affair, he served as the successful advocate for exoneration. The translator Stanley Harrison taught Russian at Cornell University during the Cold War. He is retired.
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The Wide World: 1895

The Wide World: 1895

by V.G. Korolenko
The Wide World: 1895

The Wide World: 1895

by V.G. Korolenko

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Overview

A tale of adventure, a coming-of-age novel and a biography of immigrant experience—THE WIDE WORLD is all of the above in one exciting, action-packed volume. Written for both young and old readers back in 1895, the Russian master, Vladimir Korolenko, traces the life’s journey of his strong, broad-shouldered hero, Matvei Lozinsky, from a remote village I n Ukraine to the churning existence of Gilded Age New York. Mystifying, intimidating, sometimes even threatening, immigrant trials and tribulations test the mettle of this upright young man with a luxuriant beard who doesn’t know a single word of English. His troubles begin in the great German immigrant port of Hamburg when he and his lively sidekick, Puff, miss the right boat and find themselves on one that almost collides with an iceberg. All turns out well: the young travelers dance on deck, and Matvei meets and falls in love with beautiful Anna. Freedom is the magnet; the friends know too little of it back in their homeland. Is it just because the great statue in New York harbor greets new immigrants, or something more? Matvei, Puff, and Anna disembark and think they’ve come not so much to a new country as to a new planet. The streets are filled with rushing crowds doing incomprehensible things. Incessant noise assaults the newcomers—steamship whistles, clanking trolleys, trains thundering along the famous Elevated—all so unlike the peaceful village sounds they knew. Church steeples are the highest points of the 19th century landscape, but the other structures—the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, the El—all newly built—bear down upon them. Fortunately, they have some help—good advice and even better examples of the new life—from a kindly Jewish family that runs a boarding house where they settle. There’s worse to come though. Puff succumbs to Tammany Hall corruption, and Anna and Matvei tie in with a nasty, expatriate Russian noblewoman. Intrepid Matvei even stares down a wolf in Central Park—that after becoming a homeless wanderer in the teeming melting pot of immigrant New York. He blunders upon and disrupts a rally of the city’s unemployed led by the famed 19th century labor leader Samuel Gompers. Matvei is cursed with notoriety because of the episode and pictures of the mysterious “giant” which had appeared on the front pages of all the newspapers. He clashes with the police and is rescued by a band of intrepid Italian compatriots. Placed in a train headed west, the city left behind, replaced by an American countryside that seems familiar, Matvei’s view of the new land begins to change. Judge Dick Dickinson gives him a new understanding of American law, and he comes to know Nilov, an idealistic Russian immigrant. His hopes of immigration and his experience of freedom come to be realized. AUTHOR: In Russia, Vladimir Galaktinovich Korolenko has an honored place in the great pantheon of 19th century Russian literature. Born in Zhitomir, Ukraine, the son of a judge, he was never a member of a political party but always had the worldview of a populist. He was exiled to Siberia three times, the first as a student at the Moscow Forestry Institute. A fearless Publicist and prolific literary figure, he became known as a champion of the oppressed. During the Beili’s Case, Tsarist Russia’s version of the Dreyfus Affair, he served as the successful advocate for exoneration. The translator Stanley Harrison taught Russian at Cornell University during the Cold War. He is retired.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781450039178
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication date: 02/05/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 270 KB
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