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The red laugh: fragments of a discovered manuscript

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About This Book

A fragmentary, hallucinatory manuscript offers a first-person account of soldiers marching under oppressive conditions, where heat, silence, and exhaustion blur perception. Vivid sensory detail—blinding sun, metallic flashes, parched lips—builds an atmosphere of surreal horror and bodily disintegration. Domestic memories repeatedly intrude, contrasting private tenderness with the collective muteness and mechanized progress of the columns. Shifts between stark vignette and psychological introspection emphasize dehumanization, the erosion of individual identity, and the precarious boundary between lucid observation and madness. Fragmentation and stark imagery combine into a bleak meditation on the irrationality of mass violence and the persistence of private sorrow.

About the Author

Andreyev, Leonid portrait

Leonid Andreyev

Leonid Andreyev was a Russian playwright, novelist, and short story writer, known for his exploration of existential themes and the human condition. Born in 1871, he gained prominence in the early 20th century with works that often delved into the darker aspects of life and the psyche. His notable plays, such as "He Who Gets Slapped" and "Savva and the Life of Man," showcase his ability to blend tragedy with philosophical inquiry. Andreyev's short stories, including "The Seven Who Were Hanged," reflect his deep empathy for the struggles of individuals against societal norms. His literary contributions continue to resonate, marking him as a significant figure in Russian literature.

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