<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Along with Three Sisters and The Cherry Orchard, Uncle Vanya is credited as one of Chekhov's masterpieces and a significant precursor of modern drama. Set on a country estate in late nineteenth century Russia, Uncle Vanya is in part a study of the enervation of Russian middle-class provincial life. The major dynamics between the characters themselves are centred on two obsessive love affairs that lead nowhere and a flirtation that brings disaster. Mixing the tragic and the absurd and dealing with a form that allows for ambiguity and contradiction, Uncle Vanya has been deemed the first modernist play. (David Lan)<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Anton Chekhov (1860-1904) first turned to writing as a medical student at Moscow University, from which he graduated in 1884. Among his early plays were short monologues (<i>The Evils of Tobacco</i>, 1885), one-act farces such as <i>The Bear</i>, <i>The Proposal</i> and <i>The Wedding</i> (1888-89) and the 'Platonov' material, adapted by Michael Frayn as <i>Wild Honey</i>. The first three full-length plays to be stage, <i>Ivanov</i> (1887), <i>The Wood Demon</i> (1889) and <i>The Seagull</i> (1896) were initially failures. But the Moscow Arts Theatre's revival of <i>The Seagull</i> two years later was successful and was followed by his masterpieces, <i>Uncle Vanya</i> (1889), <i>Three Sisters </i>(1901), and <i>The Cherry Orchard</i> in 1904, the year of his death.
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