AUDIOBOOK

About
Pavel Petrovich Bazhov's "The Mistress of the Copper Mountain" is a fairy tale often read as a Ural legend about miracles, craftsmanship, and the rugged beauty of the mountains.
But for me, this story is, first and foremost, a tale of unrequited love.
Stepan passed two tests.
He proved himself honest, courageous, and incorruptible.
But he failed the third test-he could not forget the Mistress of the Copper Mountain.
And this, I believe, is his greatest tragedy.
He returned to the human world, but his soul remained there forever-among the stone, the cold, and impossible love. That is precisely why Stepan never found earthly happiness: not in work, not in family, not in life. His love for the Mistress became both a gift and a curse for him.
In this audiobook, I read "The Mistress of the Copper Mountain" not as a children's fairy tale, but as an adult, bitter, and very beautiful story-about choice, about the price of a dream, and about love that lasts until the end of life.
But for me, this story is, first and foremost, a tale of unrequited love.
Stepan passed two tests.
He proved himself honest, courageous, and incorruptible.
But he failed the third test-he could not forget the Mistress of the Copper Mountain.
And this, I believe, is his greatest tragedy.
He returned to the human world, but his soul remained there forever-among the stone, the cold, and impossible love. That is precisely why Stepan never found earthly happiness: not in work, not in family, not in life. His love for the Mistress became both a gift and a curse for him.
In this audiobook, I read "The Mistress of the Copper Mountain" not as a children's fairy tale, but as an adult, bitter, and very beautiful story-about choice, about the price of a dream, and about love that lasts until the end of life.