Anton Chekhov was born in Taganrog, in southern Russia, and in his
youth paid for his own education and supported his entire family by
writing short, satirical sketches of Russian life. Though he
eventually became a physician and once considered medicine his
principal career, he continued to gain popularity and praise as a
writer for various Russian newspapers, eventually authoring more
literary work and ultimately his most well-known plays, including
Ivanov, The Seagull, and Uncle Vanya. He died of tuberculosis in
1904, and is regarded as one of the best short story writers in
history, influencing such authors as Ernest Hemingway, Vladimir
Nabokov, and Raymond Carver.
Arthur Rimbaud, born in 1854 in Charleville, France, is hailed as
the father of Symbolism. His most famous works of poetry include
The Drunken Boat and A Season in Hell. He died in 1891.Paul Schmidt
was, in addition to a translator, a playwright, actor, and author
of two books of poetry.
"Both an actor and a Russian scholar, Schmidt sets out to give us a Chekhov who makes sense...The result is a surprisingly lively Chekhov, colloguial and clear, which will come as a revelation to those who know the playwright through the widely read but rather stiff British translations....Schmidt's Chekhov should be the first choice for any American reader."-- "Atlantic Monthly"
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