Tales of Two Countries by Maksim Gorky

(7 User reviews)   1316
By Aria Campbell Posted on Mar 18, 2026
In Category - Chivalry
Gorky, Maksim, 1868-1936 Gorky, Maksim, 1868-1936
English
Hey, have you read Gorky's 'Tales of Two Countries'? It's not your typical short story collection. It feels like Gorky took his famous, gritty Russian realism—all those struggling peasants and factory workers—and threw it into a direct, almost uncomfortable, conversation with life in early 1900s America. The main thing isn't a single plot, but this huge question hanging over every page: Is the 'American Dream' real, or is it just a shiny myth that hides the same old human struggles? He writes about Coney Island with the same sharp eye he uses on a Russian village, and it makes you wonder if the problems we think are unique to our own backyard are actually pretty universal. It's like a time-traveling conversation between two worlds that thought they were nothing alike.
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Maxim Gorky's Tales of Two Countries is a collection of short stories that acts as a bridge. Written after his trip to the United States in 1906, the book places his native Russia side-by-side with this new, buzzing world of America. You won't find one continuous narrative here. Instead, you get a series of vivid snapshots—a factory worker's crushing day in Russia, the dizzying spectacle of Coney Island, the quiet despair in a tenement, the raw life of the Russian countryside.

The Story

There isn't a single plot. Think of it as two photo albums laid open on the same table. One album is filled with images from Gorky's Russia: peasants bound to the land, intellectuals filled with restless ideas, and the overwhelming weight of tradition and poverty. The other album shows America: the shocking speed of cities like New York, the strange mix of freedom and loneliness, and the surprising shadows cast by all that bright promise. Gorky moves back and forth, showing you a scene from Moscow and then one from Chicago, letting you see the echoes and the contrasts for yourself.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was Gorky's voice. He doesn't romanticize either place. His Russia isn't all soulful mystics, and his America isn't a golden land of opportunity. He shows the dirt under the fingernails in both countries. Reading this today is wild because so many of his observations still ring true. He writes about how modern life can make people feel isolated even in a crowd, or how grand national ideals often don't match the daily reality for regular people. It's not a cheerful read, but it's a deeply honest and human one. You feel like you're seeing the raw materials of the 20th century—the hopes and the disillusions—being laid bare.

Final Verdict

This is perfect for anyone who loves classic literature that feels surprisingly current. If you enjoy authors like Chekhov for their psychological depth or Steinbeck for his social conscience, you'll find a friend in Gorky. It's also a great pick for readers curious about how an outsider saw America at a pivotal moment in its history. Don't go in expecting a fast-paced novel. Go in ready for a thoughtful, sometimes challenging, walk through two different worlds with a guide who refuses to look away from the truth, no matter where he finds it.

Karen Anderson
1 year ago

Just what I was looking for.

Sarah Lopez
1 year ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Don't hesitate to start reading.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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