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How Much Land Does a Man Need?

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The story of a greedy peasant named Pakhom. Although Pakhom enjoys health and family happiness, he feels dissatisfied when he learns of the grand fortunes of his relatives. He decides to go on a quest for more land, only to find that with each new acquisition new problems develop... How Much Land Does A Man Need? gives a delightful insight into old Russian values

66 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1886

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About the author

Leo Tolstoy

7,859 books27.8k followers
Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy (Russian: Лев Николаевич Толстой; most appropriately used Liev Tolstoy; commonly Leo Tolstoy in Anglophone countries) was a Russian writer who primarily wrote novels and short stories. Later in life, he also wrote plays and essays. His two most famous works, the novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina, are acknowledged as two of the greatest novels of all time and a pinnacle of realist fiction. Many consider Tolstoy to have been one of the world's greatest novelists. Tolstoy is equally known for his complicated and paradoxical persona and for his extreme moralistic and ascetic views, which he adopted after a moral crisis and spiritual awakening in the 1870s, after which he also became noted as a moral thinker and social reformer.

His literal interpretation of the ethical teachings of Jesus, centering on the Sermon on the Mount, caused him in later life to become a fervent Christian anarchist and anarcho-pacifist. His ideas on nonviolent resistance, expressed in such works as The Kingdom of God Is Within You, were to have a profound impact on such pivotal twentieth-century figures as Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,952 reviews
Profile Image for Nayra.Hassan.
1,260 reviews6,629 followers
December 21, 2022
متر في مترين هو نصيبك من فراشك
متر في مترين هو نصيبك في مكتبك
متر في مترين هو ما يكفيك في مركبتك
و متر في مترين هو ملكيتنا النهائية على كوكب الارض
Screenshot-20200419-214317
الشيء المحزن انه في بلادنا صارت هذه المساحة الصغيرة تتعدى دائمآ الماءتي الف جنيه.. و اسعار الموت صارت تنافس اسعار الحياة

و{خلف المدفأة جلس الشيطان يسمع و قبل التحدى }؟
:و هكذا يخبرنا تولستوي في قصته المسموعة انك
لن تعرف الخوف و التعب و النصب الا عندما يصبح بحوزتك ما تخسره
اول مرة اعرف عبر هذه القصة ان هناك من يشرب لبن الخيول ؟؟!🐴 و يصنعون منه جبن و منتجات عجيبة مختلفة

رغم ان كل احداثها متوقعة الا انها تظل من اجمل القصص عن 💰الطمع


https://www.google.com.eg/url?sa=t&am...
Profile Image for Sanjay.
257 reviews507 followers
November 10, 2015

If you're thinking to read a short story then read this one. It will be the finest short story you are ever going to read.

James Joyce wrote to his daughter that it is "the greatest story that the literature of the world knows".

Truly a masterpiece! A timeless story.



Profile Image for Nika.
237 reviews304 followers
October 18, 2024
3.5 stars rounded up

This short story is about greed and temptation. It shows how their combination leads to a pernicious effect. The reader follows a peasant named Pakhom. He is obsessed with getting land. His idée fixe is to own as much land as possible. His woes derive from his insatiable appetite. Pakhom fails to listen to the warning that he receives at the last moment.

At the end of this parable, Leo Tolstoy offers an answer as to how much land a man needs. I will restrict myself to saying that that answer sounds thought-provoking and provocative in a way.
Profile Image for Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽.
1,880 reviews23.3k followers
June 3, 2019
When I was reviewing another classic Russian short story of avarice, The Queen of Spades by Alexander Pushkin, I kept asking myself, what was that other Russian short story about greed, where the man is walking around the grasslands, stepping off the land he wants to claim, and who wrote it? Well, it was Leo Tolstoy, duh, and this was the story (thank you, Google). It's fairly straightforward, but the ending packs a punch, and it's always stuck with me.

Tolstoy wrote this short story/novelette in 1886, as a morality tale. It's divided into nine brief sections or chapters. The New York Times comments that this division into nine parts is known as the "skaz" form - a Russian oral tradition that uses "informal expressions of oral speech by a simple rural narrator," which I thought was cool.

The main character in this parable is a Russian peasant named Pahom. One night Pahom is listening to his wife and her sister arguing about whether city or country life is best. Pahom agrees with his wife that a peasant's life is overall good: it's hard work but they avoid the evils and temptations of the city.
"Busy as we are from childhood tilling mother earth, we peasants have no time to let any nonsense settle in our heads. Our only trouble is that we haven’t land enough. If I had plenty of land, I shouldn’t fear the Devil himself!"
In these types of stories you really should steer clear of tempting fate or the Devil. The Devil himself overhears Pahom (remember, we're talking about a Russian morality tale here) and decides to give Pahom enough land to see if his greed will overcome him.

So Pahom begins to grow wealthy, and buys some land, and gets into arguments with his neighbors about said land, and takes off to another part of the country and buys some more land, and somehow it never is enough. Then one day he hears that the Bashkir people have ample land, wonderful land, that they're practically giving away. All he has to do is pay a flat amount and then go walk around and mark the land he wants. Whatever land he is able to mark off in one day will be his, but he needs to return to his starting point before the sun sets, or he loses his money and the land.

description

I highly recommend reading this story for yourself. It's short but powerful, especially the last third. It's available free online many places, including here.
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,121 reviews47.7k followers
February 13, 2016
This was perfect, simply perfect. It’s a masterful short story.

The wonderful Leo Tolstoy truly captured a grim aspect of human nature in just a few pages. He uses a farmer’s greed as an allegory for man’s ever growing ambition. What man has is never enough; he is always trying to go forward to grasp bigger things. But, in this, there is the ultimate danger of overreaching oneself. Man can only go so far before he destroys himself.

"Although he feared death, he could not stop. 'If I stopped now, after coming all this way - well, they'd call me an idiot!'"



-spoilers below, though the ending is very obvious-
description

Tolstoy’s farmer begins with owning just a small strip of land; he is restricted and poor, so he naturally wants more. He scrimps and he saves; he borrows and he makes promises. In doing so he manages to buy a healthy twenty acres. This is enough for any man. The farmer is initially happy with what he has earnt; however, he begins resent the poorer farmers he was once counted amongst. He saves up again, this time to buy a more private lot of land. He surrounds himself with his family, so no lowly farmer can intrude on his land. But, this again, isn’t enough. He is seduced by the possibility of unlimited land in a faraway country. He is told that he can have as much of it that he wants; he can have all the land he can cover on foot in one day provided he reaches the starting point by nightfall of the same day. Consequently, he dies in the process of trying to acquire too much. He’s greedy heart gave up on him, and stopped forever.

description

This story is a powerful allegory for the dangers of man’s greed and his ability to overstep himself. He is fuelled by self-betterment, but, ultimately, he will reach a point where he has gone too far. The farmer has many opportunities to be contented, though he couldn’t accept what he had. He constantly wanted more. Tolstoy shows us how this can lead to one’s own self-destruction. This story was superb; it was powerful and wonderfully appropriate.

This is exactly why I bought this collection, to have a taste of authors like this. I’ve had somewhat of low rating slump with these editions lately, and this one brought me back from the edges of despair. I was starting to get rather annoyed with the penguin little black classics because the last few were very disagreeable to me. This was just perfect; I’ve found an author whose works I’ll be exploring in the future. I’m going to start with Anna Karenina, which I will, no doubt, be reviewing later in the year.

Penguin Little Black Classic- 57

description

The Little Black Classic Collection by penguin looks like it contains lots of hidden gems. I couldn’t help it; they looked so good that I went and bought them all. I shall post a short review after reading each one. No doubt it will take me several months to get through all of them! Hopefully I will find some classic authors, from across the ages, that I may not have come across had I not bought this collection.

This has been my favourite edition so far! What a great way to start my reading year; it makes me want to finally push through the last fourty of these!

Profile Image for Kimber Silver.
Author 2 books420 followers
June 5, 2024
How much land indeed?

Tolstoy crafted this masterfully-written tale in 1886 and it has not lost its significance in the interim. A peasant farmer, Pahom, aspires to acquire more land than he has, and with it a subsequently increased income. He currently feels unable to reach these lofty goals, so sets out in the hope that a beneficial deal will sparkle on the horizon. Unfortunately, his hopes are dashed with each new endeavor.
Then, by a stroke of luck, the ‘golden goose’ of buys falls into his lap. Pahom learns of a place far away that is farmed by ignorant, lazy people who are willing to give their land away for trinkets. Confident he'll outsmart them and gain what his heart desires most, he gambles everything.

But is a bird in the hand always worth two in the bush?
This superb story can be read for free in less than thirty minutes and will answer the question of how much land a man needs at the end of the day.
Profile Image for Kevin Ansbro.
Author 5 books1,731 followers
February 19, 2022
"Ambition is but avarice on stilts."
—Walter Savage Landor

A parable about greed and covetousness.
Pahom, a peasant farmer, needs more land to make more money but doesn't have enough money to purchase more land. So when two seemingly simple-minded landowners offer him as much land as he can grab for a pittance, he seeks to exploit their naivety.
So which of the following two adages will prove to be appropriate?
"Never look a gift horse in the mouth."
Or
"There is no such thing as a free lunch."

Tolstoy, a moralist, will tell you exactly how much land a man needs...

This tale takes less than thirty minutes to read and is free online: http://www.online-literature.com/tols...
Profile Image for Mark  Porton.
587 reviews758 followers
August 23, 2023
This nifty little Black Penguin Classic's 55 pages contains two short stories by Leo Tolstoy.

How Much Land Does a Man Need? Involves a peasant farmer. He believes all his problems can be solved if he acquires more land. So, he’s in a perpetual cycle of selling and vuyong up land elsewhere. He eventually ends up in a faraway place and is offered a very good deal. The offer is interesting, as he needs to walk for a day, in the blistering heat, and create a perimeter of land. This plot will then be his. Sounds good, right? Well, the theme here is Human Greed and how it impacts human behaviour. GREED. GREED. GREED. This was interesting, albeit slightly predictable. 4 Stars

The second story What Men Live By, is a story steeped in religious messaging. It involves a poor shoemaker who finds a miserable bloke on the side of the road, unclothed and helpless. The shoemaker takes this man in. He and his wife feed him, clothe him, and provide him with work. This sorry soul ends up being someone we don’t expect. This story is heavy on religious messaging – in fact, it starts with several passages from the bible. I didn’t quite get it – not because of my stubborn non-beliefs, but because I literally didn’t get it!!. I tried. 2 Stars.

This little collection averages out at 3 Stars (with a Coefficient of Variation of 3.6%).
Profile Image for Fernando.
721 reviews1,061 followers
February 8, 2017
"El que mucho abarca, poco apreta." ¡Qué maravilla de cuento! Por algo era el preferido de James Joyce. Pajom me recuerda a Chichikov, el personaje principal de Almas Muertas de Nikólai Gógol y al padre de Eugènie Grandet cuando se encerraba a contar sus monedas de oro. Un cuento con una gran moraleja sobre los peligros de la avaricia sin limites. Me encantó...
Profile Image for Jonathan O'Neill.
247 reviews572 followers
June 11, 2023
4 ⭐

My partner and I just bought a new place! Exciting times. We’ve been living in a small, two-bedroom townhouse resembling a sardine can for 5 years and it’s been good to us but with a nearly-two-year-old running around and plans for a brother or sister in the near future, my God is it starting to feel a bit snug!

“We don’t have to go absolutely nuts”, I thought. “We’re happy as we are, my only grievance is that we don’t have enough land; we need more bedrooms, more of a backyard for the kids to run around! A space to get away. Give me enough of that and I’d fear no one – not even the devil himself!


I was loitering around the Classics section of Dymocks last week, as I do, when Tolstoy caught my eye. ’How Much Land Does A Man Need?’. Published in 1886 or “post-theological crisis era”, biographically speaking. I’d read ‘The Kreutzer Sonata’ from that era and knew to expect some preaching but only as garnish on a bed of Russian brilliance. So I asked:

“Leo, my friend, we have just bought a new home. It is a mere 500m² but it’s much larger than our previous property and besides, times have changed since you wrote your book, a man and his family needn’t grow all they need to live, we simply go to the grocery store and there are many other areas other than agriculture in which we can find work. Nor can we afford such an abundance of land as even your peasants appeared capable of purchasing (1300 acres for ₽1000, unheard of!). Tell us, is this enough? Will we be content?”

Tolstoy replied, gruffly:

“Absolutely not! But don’t concern yourself; it is not a result of the land itself being insufficient. You would no more be satisfied with 1000m², or 2000m², or even an acre! Because you are a vile and corruptible human who the devil can and will easily prey on, feeding on your jealousy, your ambition, and your insatiable appetite for material things which has come about as a by-product of the society in which you live. You may be more resistant to the pull of large acreage than the peasants of my novel but your time has infinitely more material temptations. The day might come when you feel as though you truly have enough and that all is right in the world but it will only take for you to look over the fence and see your neighbour’s children playing in their new swimming pool, or to spot your workmate approaching in a brand new Ranger Wildtrak, or even for it to simply dawn upon you that your perfectly functioning iphone hasn’t been upgraded for more than a year or two and the fires of greed will burn so brightly within you that you will work and work and work yourself to the bone until you attain it and more. And by the time you realise that you have outstretched and overworked yourself, it will be too late and you will think “I have plenty […] now but will God let me live to enjoy it?”, and he will not! You will die and you will find that you require just 6 feet from head to heel for your corpse to be buried amongst the worms!”

Mouth agape, I replied:

“I’m sorry I asked.”
------------------------------------------------------

"It was not given to the mother to know what her children needed for their lives. Nor was it given to the rich man to know what his true needs were. Nor is it given to any man to know, before the sun has set, whether he will need boots for his living body or slippers for his corpse." - What Men Live By (Tolstoy)
Profile Image for Ladan.
185 reviews481 followers
October 17, 2019


How much power does a man need?

The story is about the greed of a man for possessing more lands, but I see it as the insatiable appetite of the human being for power. When given power, one shows one's real face to an extent that would shock oneself! If you want to unravel the real face of your boss, your parents, your siblings, your love, your friends, even YOURSELF, be defenceless and give them power. Pahom was looking for more farmlands, yet he had no idea how much more? When he was given the choice to own the lands he sought for more, he lost control, he lost his life on the path to more!
And that very moment of him realizing that he lost himself in the game for more was so bitter and heartbreaking.


Profile Image for فايز غازي Fayez Ghazi.
Author 2 books5,021 followers
November 24, 2023
- القصة متجذرة في القدم في كل الحضارات، كأني بالإسكندر المقدوني يوصي اصحابه عند موته "دعوا يدي خارج التابوت ليعرف الناس ان الإسكندر ذو القرنين مات خالي اليدين"....

- الصبغة الدينية التي اضفاها تولستوي كانت لطيفة، فالطمع من الشيطان...
Profile Image for Cheri.
2,041 reviews2,940 followers
September 26, 2018
Written by Tolstoy in 1886, this is a short story about greed. A peasant man, Parkhom, desires more land, and that desire will cost him dearly.

When Pakhom’s wife and her sister are debating the merits of city life vs. country, Pakhom takes his wife’s side, sharing his belief that their only problem is that they haven’t enough land.

“We only have one grief—too little land! If I had plenty of land, I’d fear no one—not the devil himself!”

Of course, the devil overhears this, and the rest is a short, but worthwhile read which can be found at:
http://www.online-literature.com/tols...

Thank you to my friend, Kevin Ansbro, for bringing this one to my attention!
Profile Image for Micah Cummins.
215 reviews316 followers
March 14, 2022
33rd book of 2022

Our only trouble is that we haven't land enough. If I had plenty of land, I shouldn't fear the Devil himself!"How Much Land Does a Man Need Leo Tolstoy

How Much Land Does a Man Need is a moralistic short story, told in parable form. Our main character, Pahóm is a peasant farmer who overhears his wife and sister-in-law talking about the differences between the conditions of city life and of village life. Pahóm's wife says that she won't trade her life for anything, and while they may not be rich, they will also never go hungry. Pahóm, listening in to the conversation agrees, saying to himself that it is true; the peasant does not have much to be anxious about when tilling the earth. The only thing he can think of that could be better is if he could just have more land. If he could have more land, then his life truly could be perfect, and rival that even of the most majestic city socialite.

He sets off to accumulate more and more land. Every time he adds to his estate, the only feeling he has is one of discontent. All he can think of is island, land, land. He must have more land. Then, he would have a perfect life.

He is given an offer, a proposal from a local tribe that he cannot refuse. For only 1,000 rubles, he can have all of the lands that he can traverse in one day's time. The only caveat, he must start and return to the same exact location before the sun sets, and all that he has covered will be signed over to him. He sets off, starting his day's journey with vigor and determination. Knowing in his soul that he will be able to cover thirty miles, maybe more. And think of all that land. In the end, his greed becomes his destroyer, and his determination becomes his torment. He can have all the land he can cover in one single day, for only 1,000 rubles, but what is the true cost he will have to pay?

Of course, I am sure that the ending of this moral tale is one that many will not be surprised by. It is a cautionary tale, warning against the destructive power that greed can play in someone's life.

I enjoyed this very short piece and would recommend it to anyone. I only wish I had read this sooner in my journey of Russian literature, it would have been a great place to start. Five stars.
Profile Image for Graham “Smell the Ink”.
168 reviews29 followers
May 30, 2024
Another great lesson in life from the fabulous Tolstoy. An easy lighthearted Novella to portray one of the 7 deadly Sins. Human Greed, you could see it coming but a wonderful fun read from this legendary man.
Profile Image for Maximus.
47 reviews30 followers
February 9, 2024
This book contains 2 stories:
1. "How Much Land Does a Man Need?"
2. "What Men Live By".

- Story 1 is a story about a peasant farmer named Pakhom who monitors his wife and sister-in-law squabbling because the sister-in-law claims to live a better life than her sister (Pakhom's wife). Upon hearing this boastful conversation, Pakhom believes that owning lots of land is his answer to escaping poverty and by extension making himself invulnerable to fearing the devil. However, the devil is secretly present in the room and hears Pakhom's claim. - The moral of this story focuses on the notion of greed and how its consequences can easily lead to one's ruin.

- Story 2 follows a man and wife (Semyon and Martyona) during a season of Winter and their encounter with a man who Semyon has found freezing oustide by a chapel and has subsequently brought home. A decision that will unexpectedly change their lives. - This story encompasses the effects and lessons gathered from moral decision-making, highlights the influence of faith/religion and expresses, both brief and brilliantly, how people do not realise how much they really need one another.

Both stories were wonderful. It was interesting to learn that James Joyce considered "How Much Land Does a Man Need?" to be the world's greatest story. I was also surprisingly enticed and enlightened by the second story given its religious centre of interest and how I do not consider myself religious.

Overall, a great reading experience. Highly recommend.
320 reviews420 followers
October 14, 2018
يقول رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم: واستعينوا بالغدوة والروحة وشئ من الدُلجة، إن المنبت لا أرضاً قطع ولا ظهراً أبقى
المثل المصرى يقول : أجر يا ابن آدم جرى الوحوش غير رزقك لن تحوش ( تحوز )
هذا هو حال باهوم بطل قصتنا الذى ظل يجرى ويجرى خلف الثراء والمال دون تعب أو كلل وكلما سنحت له الفرصة لزيادة حصته من الأرض فى الدنيا انتقل لمكان تزيد فيه حصته ويزداد فيه ثراؤه إلى قضى عليه طمعه وحبه فى الزيادة وقضى نحبه فلم تزد حصته من الأرض عن متر * مترين أو مايكفى ليوارى جثته.
Profile Image for MihaElla .
321 reviews509 followers
January 30, 2023
The male hero of this very short tale, peasant Pakhom, reminds me greatly of my maternal grandmother :) If she were still around here on this Earth, I would tell her that she has a male correspondent in the same realm of activity as she used to, and I know she would be thrilled about it. Then I would tell her what he did and how he ended, and she will conclude wisely: 'Oh, this is such nonsense! What rubbish are you reading?' 😆

My grandmother didn’t read one book in her lifetime , however her mother, who was a very skilled tailoress, used to read books like one is breathing for fresh air. She never cooked and she was always asking my grandmother to give her some food, of what she used to prepare daily, otherwise she could have gone starving but never giving up on reading books. Years back I recall my mother telling me how angrily my grandmother used to react when seeing her mother in that ‘parallel’ plane of living but, although she roared with unkindly comments, she always did share her food generously.

I didn’t know my great-grandmother in life, but only from the pictures. Based on the stories I have heard from my mother, I feel I would have liked to get to know her better, but she was gone before I was landed here :) Anyway, coming back to my grandmother, I can’t help smiling of how grand the resemblance is between her and peasant Pakhom. She loved land more than herself and so far I’ve never met anyone like her. She was unique, but now the top place is split between her and Pakhom. Still my grandmother was luckier, she was almost to hit 88!

Poor Pakhom! The final race for land consumed all his living energy and left him breathless, dropping dead, whilst the sun was setting behind a high hill. He did his best however, still let’s not forget that greed is not a fair competitor. One cannot allow this villain too deep into the skin otherwise the end is surely not very bright. Though, of course, exceptions may occur, such was with my grandmother 😂
Profile Image for Ammara Abid.
205 reviews168 followers
March 5, 2017
'How much land does a man need?'

"Six feet from his head to his heels was all he needed".


I love Tolstoy's writing, he is one of the greatest novelist everlived.
Profile Image for Connie  G.
2,108 reviews687 followers
June 29, 2023
"How Much Land Does a Man Need?" is an excellent story about greed. There is a difference between the amount of land Pahom wants, and what he actually needs. The Devil works by planting tempting thoughts in Pahom's head, urging him to acquire more and more land. Pahom's greed had dire consequences.
Profile Image for Najeefa Nasreen.
66 reviews124 followers
June 25, 2022
5/5 stars

I always have mixed feelings about short stories. There are times when I feel I prefer long books that can keep me engrossed in its story for a really really long time. Sometimes, I feel short stories are equally capable of keeping me captivated. I had read How Much Land Does A Man Need? in my school days. The story got etched in my heart then. I'm equally amazed by the story on my reread as I was the first time I read the story.

It tells a story of a man's need slowly, gradually, and exponentially getting converted into greed. Tolstoy uses greed as an allegory for a man's ever-growing ambitions.

Our needs have no boundaries. Nothing is ever enough for us. We all should be ambitious. The question is, what is the extent to it?

It is a perfect life lesson teacher. It is a true masterpiece. It is what we all need to know. It is what we all should know.

Review Posted: 25 June 2022.

Visit My Blog to read this and all my other reviews.
Profile Image for Darwin8u.
1,796 reviews8,977 followers
April 1, 2019
“The further one goes, the better the land seems. ”
― Leo Tolstoy, How Much Land Does a Man Need?

description

Vol N° 57 of my Penguin Little Black Classics Box Set. This volume contains two of Tolstoy's best short stories: "How Much Land Does a Man Need?" (1836) and "What Men Live By" (1835). I loved them both. The title story is a nearly perfect parable of a Russian peasant's pursuit of land (and the Devil's pursuit of the peasant). Joyce is supposed to have considered this the world's greatest story. I'm not sure about THAT claim JJ, but I loved it. The second story "What Men Live By" is also nearly perfect. It is very Russian and while it is fundamentally VERY religious, it develops its religous theme slowly and almost backs into the holy ending.
Profile Image for Oziel Bispo.
537 reviews89 followers
February 27, 2022
"Se eu tivesse muita terra, não temeria nem mesmo o próprio diabo" Assim falou Pakhóm um camponês obcecado por ter sempre mais terras ,sempre mais. ..Nunca estava satisfeito com o que tinha. Lógico que devemos ser ambiciosos em crescer na vida , mas esse senhor era demais ,uma ambição sem fim ,a ponto de desafiar o diabo! Um conto de Tolstoi que mexeu comigo...adorei e James Joyce também:ele disse que " De quanta terra um homem precisa" é o melhor conto já escrito.
Profile Image for Dannii Elle.
2,303 reviews1,821 followers
March 14, 2022
First Read: April 2018, Rating: 4/5 stars
Second Read: March 2022, Rating: 4/5 stars


This slim volume contains two Tolstoy short stories, which I enjoyed equally during both readings. Both were interesting but it was the insights to human nature that make them such timelessly enjoyable reads.

How Much Land Does a Man Need - 4/5 stars
What Men Live By - 4/5 stars
Profile Image for Kathleen.
Author 1 book257 followers
July 1, 2023
“Why should I suffer in this narrow hole, if one can live so well elsewhere?”

A wonderfully-told story about the tragic fact that humans are never satisfied. Just a simple folk tale, really, but you can feel the Russian longing. References to the Volga, sickles, peasants, kumiss and roubles make it fun, and the end is perfection.
Profile Image for Archit.
825 reviews3,200 followers
August 16, 2017
Masterfully written.

If you are looking for a story to read in a short span, it must be your first choice!
Profile Image for Axl Oswaldo.
414 reviews253 followers
March 18, 2022
A good friend of mine and I are reading some Russian classics together this year, and I couldn’t be enjoying this journey more.

How Much Land Does a Man Need? is a very short tale with a great, powerful message – this is, in my opinion, the best way to describe such a piece of literature.
Tolstoy, as always, knows how to describe clearly and deeply what is happening in his stories – his prose in this case is somehow straightforward (the story is too short, the shortest I have read by him), but at the same time, quite meaningful, enjoyable, and furthermore, with a remarkable, astonishing ending (whose final lines had indeed a big impact on me). Perhaps the ending is kind of predictable due to the events that are taking place throughout the story, however, the way everything ends up being is in fact so remarkable that you will never forget that part.

A story about greed and selfishness, a man who constantly wants more and more and is never satisfied, alas, life doesn't work like that; and so, eventually his destiny comes to one question: will he be able to learn his lesson before it is too late?
I'd wholeheartedly recommend this short story, whether you want to read this author for the first time or continue reading his works.

“There is plenty of land,” thought he, “but will God let me live on it?"
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