Maksim Gorky is a pseudonym of Aleksei Maksimovich Peshkov, who was
born into a poor Russian family in Nizhnii Novgorod on Volga river.
Gorky lost his father at an early age, he was beaten by his stepfather
and became an orphan at age 9, when his mother died. He was brought up
by his grandmother, who helped his development as a storyteller.
He was blessed with a brilliant memory, but failed to enter a
University of Kazan. At age 19 he survived a suicide attempt, because
the bullet missed his heart. After that Gorky traveled on foot for 5
years all over Central Russia, worked as a sailor on a Volga steamboat,
then a salesperson, a railway worker, a salt miller, and a lawyer's
clerk. At that time he was arrested for his public criticism of the
Tsar and social injustices in Russia. He started writing for newspapers
and published his first 'Sketches and Stories' in 1890s. Later he wrote
an autobiographic book "My Universities" based on impressions from his
travels and jobs. Gorky wrote with sympathy about the simple folks, the
outcasts, the gypsies, the hobos and dreamers in the context of social
decay in the Russian Empire. He became friends with
Anton Chekhov and
Lev Tolstoy. His play 'The Lower Depths' (1892) was praised by Chekhov and
was successfully played in Europe and the United States. His political
activism resulted in cancellation of his membership in the Russian
Academy.
Anton Chekhov and
Vladimir Korolenko left the Academy in protest and solidarity
with Gorky. He went to live in Europe and America in 1906-13. In
America he started his classic novel, 'The Mother', about a Russian
Christian woman and her imprisoned son, who both joined revolutionaries
under the illusion that revolution follows Christ's messages.
After the Russian revolution in 1917, Gorky criticized Lenin and
communists for their "bloody experiments on the Russian people". He
wrote, 'Lenin and Trotsky are corrupted with the dirty poison of power.
They are disrespectful of human rights, freedom of speech and all other
civil liberties". Soon Gorky received a handwritten warning letter from
Lenin. Later his friend Nikolai Gumilev, ex-husband of
Anna Akhmatova was
executed by communists. In 1921 Gorky emigrated to Europe and settled
in Capri. He became careful in his critique of communism. In 1932 after
a series of brief visits, he returned to
Soviet Russia. He was placed in a rich Moscow mansion of the former
railroad tycoon Ryabushinsky. His return from the fascist Italy was a victory for Soviet
propaganda. He was made the Chairman of the Soviet Writer's Union, and
a figurehead of "socialist realism" . After the murder of Kirov in 1934
Gorky was under a house arrest. His son died in 1935. The following year Gorki
Gorky died suddenly at the Lenin's dacha in Moscow.