Fathers and Children
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Completed, First published Mar 02, 2026

A suffocating humidity clings to the estate, mirroring the stagnant tensions between generations. Dust motes dance in the fading light of long, shadowed corridors where the weight of expectation – of Russia’s future – presses down like a shroud. The novel unfolds not as a clash of ideologies, but as a slow erosion of belief, a crumbling of foundations beneath the weight of unacknowledged grief and simmering resentment. Every stolen glance across a dinner table, every suppressed sigh in a darkened garden, feels laced with the venom of unspoken truths. The air itself is thick with the scent of decay – not just of the old order, but of the romantic idealism that fuelled it. A pervasive melancholia bleeds from the damp forests surrounding the manor, mirroring the disillusionment that festers within the hearts of those trapped within its orbit. The narrative is a labyrinth of regret, shadowed by the specter of lost youth and the chilling realization that progress, if it comes at all, arrives only as a cold, unforgiving wind, sweeping away the remnants of a bygone era. The landscape isn't merely observed; it *feels* like a witness to the slow, agonizing unraveling of faith, its ancient trees groaning with the weight of unfulfilled promises. A quiet dread permeates the story, less of a violent upheaval, and more of a suffocating stillness, a sense of inevitability that settles like frost on the barren fields.
Copyright: Public Domain
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