Who Can Be Happy and Free in Russia? by Nikolai Alekseevich Nekrasov
Nikolai Nekrasov's Who Can Be Happy and Free in Russia? is a massive, unfinished poem that reads like a novel. It follows seven peasants from different villages who get into a heated argument about who has the best life in Russia after the 1861 emancipation of the serfs. To settle it, they make a pact to travel the land until they find a truly happy man.
The Story
Their journey is the whole book. It’s less a straight plot and more a collection of encounters. They interview a priest, a landowner, a soldier, and peasants—lots of peasants. Everyone has a story, and almost no one has a good one. The priest talks about the hypocrisy of his flock. A landowner mourns his lost power. But the most powerful sections belong to the peasants, especially the women. One long, devastating section follows a peasant woman named Matryona, detailing a life of backbreaking labor, loss, and submission. The 'quest' becomes a dark joke. With each stop, the question shifts from 'Who is happy?' to 'Why is nobody happy?' and finally to 'What would it even take to be happy here?'
Why You Should Read It
Don't let the 19th-century Russian setting fool you. This book is alive. Nekrasov writes with a fierce, angry love for the common people. He doesn't romanticize poverty; he shows its grinding, exhausting reality. But he also shows incredible dignity and flashes of wicked humor in his characters. You feel the mud, the hunger, and the small, stolen moments of joy. Reading it, you understand the deep, systemic roots of discontent. It’s not about one bad ruler or one bad harvest. It’s about a whole structure designed to keep people down. It’s heartbreaking, but it’s not hopeless. The very act of the peasants asking the question, of telling their stories, feels like a first step toward change.
Final Verdict
This is a book for patient readers who love character and social insight over fast-paced action. It’s perfect for fans of classic literature that feels politically urgent, like the works of Charles Dickens or Upton Sinclair. If you enjoyed the journey-of-discovery style of Canterbury Tales or the deep dive into a society's ills like in The Grapes of Wrath, you’ll find a kindred spirit in Nekrasov. Fair warning: it's long, it's sad, and it doesn't have a neat ending. But it offers a raw, unforgettable portrait of a people searching for a freedom that laws alone couldn't give them.
Emma Thompson
8 months agoSimply put, the character development leaves a lasting impact. Definitely a 5-star read.
Susan Rodriguez
6 months agoSolid story.