

None of them, at least that I am aware, are philologists able to speak numerous languages and translate myths from their original tongues. To sound like Zeppelin, you'd have to go back to their sources.Tolkien's followers fall into the same boat. Likewise, Their imitators simplified Zeppelin's music, which is why they all began to sound like one another, but not like Zeppelin. Zeppelin was inspired by American bluesmen, jazz, funk, classical compositions, and traditional English music.They distilled what appealed to them, westernizing and popularizing it. For example, Led Zeppelin inspired scores and scores of imitators who all grew to sound very similar to one another, but by and large, not that similar to Led Zeppelin. Chekhov is another such innovator, whose followers, like Tolkien's or Petrarch's, are not fit to be placed in the same category as their inspiration.To digress for a moment, this relates to a philosophical theory on the nature of inspiration which I developed while viewing how my own works often differed from the originals which inspired them. It is often the case that a seminal work which inspires a movement will actually not be classifiable under the genre it has created.

This edition includes a biographical afterword. Twenty-eight stories are collected here in the “Selected Stories of Anton Chekhov” including many of the author’s most popular shorter works. As a result of his widespread popularity, Chekhov amassed a vast collection of short stories displaying an early use of stream-of-consciousness writing, as well as his powerful ideas concerning the individual, the tedium of life, and the beauty of nature and humanity.

Chekhov began paying more attention to his writing, revising and developing his own principles and conceptions of truth, for a time coming under the influence of Leo Tolstoy. Petersburg for the Novoye Vremya (New Times), owned by publishing magnate Alexey Suvorin.

What began as a necessity became a legitimate career in 1886 when he was asked to write in St. The son of a former serf in southern Russia, he attended Moscow University to study medicine, writing short stories for periodicals in order to support his family. Anton Chekhov was a master of the short story.
