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Ксаня на подмостках театра book cover
Ксаня на подмостках театра
2026
First Published
3.20
Average Rating
300
Number of Pages
Мечтала ли ты когда-нибудь посвятить свою жизнь театру, стать известной актрисой и покорять сердца мужчин! Каково же оно в действительности, блестящая и загадочная театральная жизнь? В юном возрасте оставшись без родителей, потерпев горечь утраты близкого человека, чудом избежать смерти, гордая и своенравная девочка Ксаня выбирает тернистый, но соблазнительный путь актрисы. Что ждет ее впереди: долгожданное счастье или очередное разочарование? Если ты смелая и независимая и не боишься превратностей судьбы, история отважной Ксана не оставит тебя равнодушной!
Avg Rating
3.20
Number of Ratings
5
5 STARS
20%
4 STARS
20%
3 STARS
40%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
20%
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Authors

Lidia Charskaya
Lidia Charskaya
Author · 9 books

Lidia Alekseyevna Charskaya (Russian: Лидия Алексеевна Чарская) was a Russian writer and actress. Charskaya was her pseudonym; her real last name was Churilova. Charskaya worked as an actress at the Alexandrinsky Theatre from 1898 to 1924. From 1901 to 1916 she published about eighty books, several of which became bestsellers. Her most popular work was the novel Princess Dzhavakha (1903).[1] In the 1940s, when Boris Pasternak was writing his novel Doctor Zhivago, he said that he was "writing almost like Charskaya", because he wanted to be accessible and dreamed that his prose would be gulped down "even by a seamstress, even by a dishwasher." Her novels fall into four general categories: stories that take place in boarding schools for elite girls; historical novels about women; autobiographical novels that follow the heroine from boarding school to a career; and detective and adventure stories. The main theme of most of her works is friendship among girls. The protagonists are usually independent girls and women who look for adventure or some kind of diversion from the everyday routine. Critics have commented that these characteristics account in large part for the wide popularity of Charskaya's works among young girls in early 20th century Russia. Charskaya's reputation began to fade in 1912 after the critic Korney Chukovsky published an article in which he wrote that her books were formulaic, repetitious, and excessive with respect to female emotions. She stopped publishing in 1916, and in 1920 her works were banned. From 1924 until her death in 1938 she lived in poverty, supported mostly by friends. Throughout the Soviet period her work was lowly regarded, although there is plenty of evidence that young girls continued secretly to read her works, at least through the 1930s. In the late 1980s and 1990s Charskaya's works were revived in Russia, as several of her works appeared in new editions.

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