Smoke in the Forest

Smoke in the Forest
Author Arkady Gaidar
Original title Дым в лесу
Country Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Language Russian
Genre Children's literature
Publisher Detskaya Literatura, Moscow
Publication date
1939
Media type Print

Smoke in the Forest (Dym v lesu, Дым в лесу) is a short story by the Soviet children's writer Arkady Gaidar, first published in No.2, February 1939 issue of Pioneer magazine. Later that year it was published by Detizdat Publishers as a separate book with illustrations by P.Yermolayev. In 1940 Gaidar included it into his compilation Rasskazy (Short Stories).[1] In 1955 Yevgeny Karelov shot a film Smoke in the Forest, based upon Gaidar's story.[2]

Plot summary

Saboteurs (referred to as 'belogvardeitsy', the 'White Guardians') set fire to the forest with the purpose of destroying the factory nearby. Pilot Fedoseyev, sent over with the reconnaissance mission fails to return in time. Volodya (the protagonist, a boy of 11) with Fenya (5) and her mother (pilot Fedoseyev's daughter and wife, respectively), travel in a lorry to the aerodrome.

While playing with Brutik (a puppy who's tagged along behind them), the boy gets lost. Rushing through the forest, he suddenly runs into injured pilot Fedoseyev whose plane, as it happens, has been shot down by the enemy. Sent back to the aerodrome, the boy gets lost again, then sets out to swim across the river and all but drowns, being in the end saved miraculously by a sheep-dog Lutta and the Red Army men following her. Brutik, though, while crossing the river, dies. [3]

Quotes

References

  1. Ebin, F. Commentaries. The Works of A.P.Gaidar in 4 Volumes. Detskaya Literatura, 1964. Vol III, p. 397
  2. Дым в лесу, 1955 Soviet film
  3. The Works of A.P.Gaidar in 4 Volumes. Detskaya Literatura, 1964. Vol III, pp. 8-33
  4. The Works of A.P.Gaidar in 4 Volumes. Detskaya Literatura, 1964. Vol III, pp. 32-33
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.