Maxim Gorky was born in 1868, suffered a deprived childhood and spent his early youth as a vagrant, but by the 1890s he was ranked with Tolstoy and Chekhov among Russia's leading writers. For long he was best known in the West as a novelist, notably for
The Mother (1907) and for the three volumes of his
Autobiography, with only
The Lower Depths (1902) established on the stage; but in the last third of the twentieth century his other plays began also to be recognised for their portrayals of the painful pre-revolutionary decades. Besides
Philistines (1901), these included
Summerfolk (1904),
Children of the Sun (1905),
Enemies (1906) and
Vassa Shelesnova (1910). After some equivocation and years in exile, he finally embraced the Revolution, and died in 1936.
Gorky, en esta historia, reveló la tierra misteriosa de la mente de una mujer. Mostró que una mujer no es sólo una mujer: es una madre, una cuidadora, una amante, un alma luchadora que se cuestiona su existencia en este vasto universo.
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