Correspondence with Knipper is interesting not only as a chronicle of the last years of Chekhov’s life, not only as a valuable source of information about the first years of the Art Theater. Knipper took an exceptional place in Chekhov’s spiritual life in recent years, and letters to her most fully reflect his inner world in those years, to the extent that Chekhov generally considered it necessary to open this inner world to other, even closest people. In letters to his wife, Chekhov’s ability to say something important, significant in a playful form, as if by chance, without lengthy explanations, was especially pronounced.
50 Meisterwerke Musst Du Lesen, Bevor Du Stirbst: Vol. 2
Jakob Christoph Heer, Immanuel Kant, Ernst Weiß, Stefan Zweig, Franz Kafka, Theodor Fontane, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Emile Zola, Karl May, Antoine François Prévos, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, E. T. Hoffmann, Lev Tolstoy, Charles Baudelaire, Heinrich von Kleist, Edgar Allan Poe, Rainer Maria Rilke, Hermann Hesse, Jules Verne, Joseph Conrad, Gustave Flaubert, Jacques-Henri Bernardin, Joseph Roth, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Ludwig Ganghofer, Thomas Morus, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, BookTime












