The Faraway Bride
発行者による作品情報
We rely on your support to help us keep producing beautiful, free, and unrestricted editions of literature for the digital age. Will you support our efforts with a donation ? For unconvincing reasons Old Sergei Malinin has gone blind; the family's woes are compounded when their shop in Chi-tao-kou, Manchuria is raided by the Red Army. They're left relying on what little money can be scraped together from their daughter Anna's sewing and their son Seryozha's timberwork. Luckily, Old Sergei, ever the businessman, has remembered that ten years ago he lent his old friend Gavril Ilitch Isaev two hundred yen, a sum that, with interest, would now be immensely valuable to the Malinins. The money is in Seoul, but a three week walk through the Korean mountains to a city sounds like the perfect adventure to Seryozha, and the unexpected appearance of an English-educated Chinese lawyer who happens to know the way is enough to tip Anna over the edge into agreeing with the plan. The Faraway Bride (alternately titled Tobit Transplanted for the British market) is Stella Benson's best known work. The story, liberally cribbed from the tale of Tobit from the Apocrypha, is rehomed to late 1920s Manchuria, a setting characterized by political unrest and emigration. The resulting jumble of languages and cultures leads to a perhaps surprisingly comic take on the subject, but one that's full of great empathy for the main characters. Stella Benson (died 1933) was a major literary figure of the early 20th century. Their work has endured across generations and continues to be read and studied worldwide. As a work of classic literary fiction, The Faraway Bride exemplifies the narrative craft and social insight that defined great storytelling of its era. Literary fiction of this period was characterized by careful attention to character psychology, social milieu, and the moral questions that animated public discourse.