The Shooting Party
Book Details
Written by Anton Chekhov, John Sutherland, and Ronald Wilks.
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Editorial Review (from Amazon.com)
The Shooting Party wraps a story of concealed love and fatal jealousy into a classic murder mystery. When a young woman dies during a shooting party at the country estate of a dissolute count, a magistrate is called to investigate. But suspicion descends upon virtually everyone, for, as we soon learn, the victim was at the center of a tangled web of relationships—with her elderly husband, with the lecherous count, and with the magistrate himself. One of Anton Chekhov’s earliest experiments in fiction, this short, riveting novel prefigures the mature style he would develop in his magnificent stories and plays.User Reviews (1) Login or create an account to write a review.
Fence thinks this book is Good.
It has take me quite a while to finish this short novel, still I would recommend it highly. Chekhov is famous for his plays, his Cherry Orchard’s and Russian sisters, not to mention Uncle Vanya’s trousers[1] but he also wrote a large number of novels and short stories.
The Shooting Party is a novel within a novel. The prelude and postscript are written by an editor, about the work contained between. This story, The Shooting Party, is the work of a retired magistrate, who is telling the true story of a case that he was involved in some years before. This case revolves around a “girl in red†who enchants more than one of the local men.
Both stories are told in the first person narration, although by different narrators. Every now and then the editor will insert a little note on the text, pointing out what he feel the reader should be paying attention to by his use of footnotes.
Despite being an incredibly unlikeable character, somehow, even knowing everything that he is responsible, I still ended up liking him. Maybe because of his cynical comments and mindset. Maybe because of the odd touch of humour amid the drama.
A fatal love story, and a romance, this book partly inspired Agatha Christie’s The Murder of Roger Akroyd. I borrowed my copy from the library, it is so old I can’t find the isbn, but I may buy a copy of my own.
