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The Cherry Orchard (Dover Thrift Editions)

The Cherry Orchard (Dover Thrift Editions)
Author: Anton Chekhov
Publisher: Dover Publications
Category: Book

List Price: $2.00
Buy New: $0.01
You Save: $1.99 (100%)



New (33) Used (86) from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 123906

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 64
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.1 x 0.2

ISBN: 0486266826
Dewey Decimal Number: 891.723
EAN: 9780486266824
ASIN: 0486266826

Publication Date: January 1, 1991
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Cherry Orchard
  • Audio Download - The Cherry Orchard (Dramatized)
  • Paperback - Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard: Translation Michael Frayn (Methuen's Theatre Classics)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard: Translation David Lan (Methuen Modern Plays)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (Methuen Drama)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (Cambridge Literature)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (French's Acting Editions)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Audio CD - The Cherry Orchard
  • Hardcover - The cherry orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (van Itallie)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard: A Comedy in Four Acts
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (Tale Blazers)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - Cherry Orchard (Library of Russian Classics)
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Audio Cassette - The Cherry Orchard (Classic Books on Cassettes Collection)
  • Audio CD - The Cherry Orchard, (Classic Books on CD) [UNABRIDGED]
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard (Plays for Performance)
  • Hardcover - The Cherry Orchard (Plays for Performance)
  • Library Binding - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Audio Cassette - The Cherry Orchard
  • Audio CD - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard
  • Paperback - Chekhov: The Cherry Orchard (Russian Texts) (Russian Texts)
  • Paperback - Cherry Orchard
  • Hardcover - Cherry Orchard (Oberon Classics Hardback Series)
  • Unknown Binding - The cherry orchard,: A comedy in four acts (The Drama library)
  • Paperback - Minnesota drama editions
  • Paperback - The Cherry Orchard: A Comedy in Four Acts (An Evergreen Book)

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Classic of world drama concerns the passing of the old semifeudal order in turn-of-the-century Russia, symbolized in the sale of the cherry orchard owned by Madame Ranevskaya. The work also showcases the great Russian writer's rich sensitivities as an observer of human nature. An inexpensive, high-quality edition, reprinted from a standard edition of the play.


Download Description
PISCHIN. Well . . Dashenka told me. Now I'm in such a position, I wouldn't mind forging them . . . I've got to pay 310 roubles the day after to-morrow . . . I've got 130 already. . . . [Feels his pockets, nervously] I've lost the money! The money's gone! [Crying] Where's the money? [Joyfully] Here it is behind the lining . . . I even began to perspire.


Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Quintessentially Chekov   March 30, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This, Chekov's last play, is the story of Madame Ranyevskaya's family, which lost its wealth, and an estate that included a cherry orchard. The subtext carries the story and is about how not to deal with existentialist stasis -- a state of being immobilized by the fear of change, and the complexity of the denial that under lay this fear. It is this fear and the symbolism it invokes that makes the play universal in its depiction of human fear, suffering, and inability to address change; for at one time or another, these too have engulfed us all. It is against this backdrop that Chekov's real talent, comes to the fore: his incredible ability to graphically develop characters and analyze them psychologically with a fine-tooth comb.

Chekov demonstrates an uncanny ability to draw out the deepest images of personal psychological angst, and is almost comical in his analysis which is always exquisitely sensitive -even of the most serious of issues such as those that beset this wealthy Russian family. The underlying message is that "life must go on" whether or not we address reality squarely in the face, or allow it to hit us in the "behind" as we are on the way out the door, as it did Madame Ranyevskaya and her family, as her creditors came to take away all of her possessions, including her cherry orchard from under her.

This is quintessentially Chekov; but it needs to be read several times to weave together the text with the subtext.

Five stars.



1 out of 5 stars Who is the translator?   October 15, 2007
With hundreds of versions of The Cherry Orchard available, you would think that Amazon would have the sense to name the translator. I think this is the same version used by LA Theater Works in which case the translator would be Michael Frayn.


1 out of 5 stars Checkhov for Dummies   July 18, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is an abysmal production. To anyone outside of LA the accents will become tiresome (I'm so `stoopid'; in the `bairth'-house etc) and the translation and acting style make this play sound like an episode of a soap opera. The recording begins like so many audio books with an unnecessary spoken introduction - "The Cherry Orchard by Anton Chekhov ...." (like if I was expecting Dolly Parton!). And to make matters worse, the announcer claims it is recorded before a live audience. It is patently not so, there are sound effects galore, including a pathetically obvious laugh track purported to be the audience but not one hint of an actor walking across the stage and, apart from the canned laughter, not a cough, murmur, shuffle or peep from the audience. Nice try LA Theatreworks, it might do for a bored 10th grader who is too lazy to read the text but the whole thing sounds like a bunch of second rate actors with no idea of what they doing. They might get walk-ons in The Bold and the Beautiful if they try harder but this fake acting in front of a fake audience is an insult.


5 out of 5 stars On Chekhov's art   August 21, 2006
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Chekhov's plays work on many different levels. On the one it is the story of the characters' relationships to each other. Often in Chekhov there is disillusionment and disappointment, misunderstanding and desire unrealized. Often too the characters have ideas and dreams about themselves which simply do not find their justification in the world. But in all this there is always interspersed moments of tenderness and poignancy, of delicate feeling, perceptions of beauty.
On another level there are ' major themes'. Here it is of the Old Order passing and the coming of the new. The 'Cherry Orchard' is the symbol of this. And the purchase of it by the former serf Lopahin is the sign of the transition taking place in Russia. The old order people, Ranskanaya her daughters and brother cling to the older world, refuse to sell it out by accepting the offer to build on it dachas, and connect it with the railway line. But in the end the extravagance of Ranskaya is forced to yield, and the 'Cherry Orchard' is cut down.
In the final moments of the play the elderly servant Firs, the true symbol of the one raised in the old order and too deeply connected to it, to ever leave it, lies down and seems to pass away.
Chekhov's art is an art of sadness and beauty, of cruelty and change , but above all of human character and feeling portrayed in complexity and contradiction- and in a language of poetic compression deep in feeling.




3 out of 5 stars Is it a comedy or not?   October 24, 2005
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I couldn't figure out whether this was a comedy or not. It says at the beginning of the play that it is, but for the most part it seemed really depressing to me. I know technically you can't call it a tragedy because the heroine didn't cause her own downfall, but still, it most certainly was NOT a comedy.
All that aside, I thought the play was fairly enjoyable. It is basically about a rich family in Russia who are forced to sell their estate and cherry orchard because they have no money. Altogether, it was fairly interesting, but confusing. The character's names were so similar that I had to keep looking back to figure out who was who. Three stars.


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