tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3383938214852108244.post5295599720517244268..comments2024-03-29T03:04:00.853-05:00Comments on Wuthering <br>Expectations: ’But it really is interesting, you know!’ - Leonid Andreyev's "Darkness" and "The Seven Who Were Hanged"Amateur Reader (Tom)http://www.blogger.com/profile/13675275555757408496noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3383938214852108244.post-44696075828691171552016-08-23T09:41:16.011-05:002016-08-23T09:41:16.011-05:00I can see, given Andreyev's association with G...I can see, given Andreyev's association with Gorky, how a person could place him with the Soviet writers. But Andreyev actually died in 1919, in exile in Finland, ferociously anti-Bolshevik.<br /><br />He worked with a mix of modes, which makes him a little hard to place, although who knows how Olga Carlisle's choices make him look to me.Amateur Reader (Tom)https://www.blogger.com/profile/13675275555757408496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3383938214852108244.post-77850558368811850202016-08-23T05:06:49.214-05:002016-08-23T05:06:49.214-05:00I've been following your posts on Andreyev wit...I've been following your posts on Andreyev with interest as I have some of his works on the shelves - definitely a collection included "The Seven..." and possible others. I'd somehow thought of him as one of those Soviet Realist authors but obviously he's a lot more than that!<br /><br />kaggsysbookishramblingsAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com