Plays by Anton Chekhov, Second Series by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
If you're looking for a plot full of car chases and shocking twists, you're in the wrong place. Chekhov's plays in this collection – which includes masterpieces like Uncle Vanya, Three Sisters, and The Cherry Orchard – are built on something quieter and, in my opinion, more powerful. They show us a group of characters, usually a family or close friends, gathered at a country estate. They talk about the future, complain about the past, and try to fill the empty hours.
The Story
There isn't one single story, but a shared feeling. In Uncle Vanya, a man realizes he's wasted his life managing an estate for a brother-in-law he now sees as a fraud. In Three Sisters, three smart, passionate women are slowly worn down by life in a provincial town, forever dreaming of a move to Moscow that never happens. In The Cherry Orchard, a genteel family faces the sale of their beloved estate and their cherished cherry orchard, unable to adapt to a changing world. The action is in the conversations, the sighs, the things left painfully unsaid.
Why You Should Read It
I love these plays because they feel startlingly modern. Chekhov doesn't judge his characters; he shows them to us with all their flaws, their self-pity, their misplaced hopes, and their small kindnesses. You'll recognize these people. They're the friend who always talks about changing their life but never does. They're the family member stuck in their ways. The genius is in how Chekhov makes you care about them anyway. He captures that universal human feeling of being slightly disappointed by life, of wondering "Is this all there is?" The dialogue is brilliant – often funny, always revealing, and full of subtext where the real drama lives.
Final Verdict
This collection is perfect for anyone who loves character-driven stories and doesn't mind a little existential unease with their literature. It's for readers who appreciate subtlety over spectacle. If you enjoy writers who explore the quiet tragedies of everyday life, like Alice Munro or Richard Yates, you'll find a kindred spirit in Chekhov. Don't expect a thrilling climax; expect a slow, deep recognition that will make you look at the people around you – and maybe yourself – a little differently. It's a masterclass in writing real human beings.
This title is part of the public domain archive. You do not need permission to reproduce this work.
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