Classics and the Western Canon discussion
Chekhov Short Stories
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The Swedish Match
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As with the sitcom feel of In The Dark, this storyline also felt very modern and familiar. The detective duo; one older, more cynical and cautious, aware of the need to play by the rules and with an eye perhaps on his pension; and the younger, hotheaded one who's ambitious and unafraid to upset the apple cart. Really liked the line from Chubikov about wanting to buy Dyukovsky a cigar case at the fair. He definitely needs to slow down and smoke a cigar.
Just another note. I'm a big fan of detective novels, especially Conan Doyle, and I've also read some Poe and Wilkie Collins from that era, but really didn't know anything about Gaboriau, who's referenced in this story. Looking at Wikipedia, it looks like Gaboriau's Monsieur Lecoq was very influential in the genre.

That can be a situation with Russian literature..the names are so unfamiliar and can get seemingly tangled in all their variations!


I had the same experience. I just finished reading it, and while I found it funny, I kind of skimmed the whole thing. :o I have never been a big reader of detective fiction, though, so I'm sure I missed a lot.

I think this is the most overt, or least subtle of Chekhov's stories that I've read. Dyukovsky's deductions seem calculated for comic effect -- just so Chubikov can repeat his line about how Dyukovsky's time would be spent better doing... whatever. It reminded me of comedy skits that just go on too long. But this is a parody, I am told, so I'm guessing that was an aspect of the stories he was sending up.




Detective fiction has a long history in Russian literature, and is evidently still quite popular. The Swedish Match is a parody of the genre, and of detectives in general, but there is also a hint of the Brothers Karamazov here. At least I thought so, and Dostoevsky gets a shout out, so maybe it's not so far-fetched to think that Chekhov had some elements of the Karamazov story in mind.
This story is #014 on the Eldritch Press site: http://www.eldritchpress.org/ac/jr/