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White Nights, is a classic short story by Fyodor Dostoevsky, one of the worlds most loved and respected authors. Set in St. Petersburg, this is a deep and moving story of a young man battling with his inner restlessness. A light and tender narrative, it journeys deep into the torment and guilt of unrequited love. A timeless classic and a great addition to any lover of great fiction. Any profits generated from the sale of this book will go towards the Freeriver Community Project which aims to promote well-being and strong communities. To learn more about the Freeriver Community Project please visit the website. www.freerivercommunity.com Review: Chickens go berserk in the end! - This is a book about a baseball nut named Gulash. He has a gross rash that prevented him from playing for the Georgia Peaches legendary baseball team after college. The rash wasn't contagious but no one cared. It was gross and Gulash was always scratching it and then touching things. So they got rid of him. One day he goes to a tag sale and this wise, little, old Chinese woman gives him an old prescription strength tube of cortisone. On the way home he is thinking about popcorn and lottery tickets and he drives straight into a chicken coop. The rooster goes berserk and his final moments are spent in a car being attacked by a mob of irate chickens who go to the bathroom everywhere. But he isn't itchy. He dies in peace surrounded by chaos and feathers. You will like this book! Review: Never read beforeโฆ - I never read this short story until this year and Iโm grateful I have a physical copy because I could read this over and over again, while never getting sick of it. Such a lovely, sad, but hopeful story experience that I wish to experience reading for the first time again.
| Best Sellers Rank | #9,567 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #120 in Romance Collections & Anthologies (Books) #18,583 in Literature & Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 474 Reviews |
H**S
Chickens go berserk in the end!
This is a book about a baseball nut named Gulash. He has a gross rash that prevented him from playing for the Georgia Peaches legendary baseball team after college. The rash wasn't contagious but no one cared. It was gross and Gulash was always scratching it and then touching things. So they got rid of him. One day he goes to a tag sale and this wise, little, old Chinese woman gives him an old prescription strength tube of cortisone. On the way home he is thinking about popcorn and lottery tickets and he drives straight into a chicken coop. The rooster goes berserk and his final moments are spent in a car being attacked by a mob of irate chickens who go to the bathroom everywhere. But he isn't itchy. He dies in peace surrounded by chaos and feathers. You will like this book!
H**Y
Never read beforeโฆ
I never read this short story until this year and Iโm grateful I have a physical copy because I could read this over and over again, while never getting sick of it. Such a lovely, sad, but hopeful story experience that I wish to experience reading for the first time again.
E**T
Amazing book but weird publisher choices
This might just be one of the best books Iโve ever read. The formatting by the publisher is a little funky, but thatโs able to be looked past. Dostoevsky is a genius
A**A
Short but impactful
An odd story, but overall theme was great. This book demonstrates how everyone views the world in different yet similar ways.
C**S
White nights
Loved, came a bit bigger than expected but very good book!
S**R
gorgeous edition
W**N
Tale of desperation, love and imagination
Read it in one night. It's a dark, romantic dreamscape about "the one that got away". It's seemingly told from the perspective of a lonely young man, but in reality I believe it comes from the imagination of the old man whose own relationship has since become stale and mundane, as if his own wife could have instead run off just as he fell in love with her.
P**N
Not what was expected
Word-page ratio was odd, and it was almost like a magazine rather than a book. Nevertheless it is readable.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 months ago