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248 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1916
His childlike sense of humor, is as usual, traded against individuals, classes, groups, institutions and even the Church. In the Mechical Justice, he satirizes the meritocratic Professor of the academe.
As I may have stated in my earlier review of Kuprin’s,what this sensitive soul of a writer does, is to see through the eyes of his very characters. Naturally, his flair and storge for animals – especially dogs – comes out fully in The White Poodle and Dog’s Happiness.
To pay a tribute to Kuprin on this short-story collection, will be to paraphrase his own, in a slightly different way: We can look at the characters and scenes of his stories in this short-story collection, with a microscope, while they in turn can look at us with a telescope, especially when we are approaching this short-story collection after a century since it was originally written.