The Short Stories of Leo Tolstoy is an anthology consisting of over 80 short stories of famed Russian author, Leo Tolstoy. This selection includes an active table of contents and the Kindle "go to" options are enabled. Selections in this anthology include:
After the Ball Albert The Bear Hunt The Candle The Captive in the Caucasus The Coffee House of Surat The Cutting of the Forest The Devil A Dialogue Among Clever People Diary of a Lunatic The Empty Drum Esarhaddon, King of Assyria Evil Allures, But Good Endures Exiled to Siberia Fables for Children Father Sergius The Forged Coupon After the Dance Alyosha the Pot My Dream There are No Guilty People The Young Tsar The Godfather The Godson The Grain as Big as a Hen's Egg The Great Bear Strider:The Story of a Horse How Much Land Does One Man Need? Llyas The Imp and the Crust Ivan the Fool Little Girls Wiser Than Men A Lost Opportunity Lucerne A Spark Neglected Burns the House Polikushka The Porcelain Doll An Old Acquaintance Recollections of a Billard-marker The Repentant Sinner The Snowstorm Three Deaths The Three Hermits Three Parables Three Questions Too Dear! The Two Brothers and the Gold Two Old Men What Men Live By Where Love is, There God is Also Work, Death and Sickness God Sees the Truth, but Waits The Children Wiser than the Elders The Death of Ivanllich Hatred is Sweet, but God is Strong Works of Guy de Maupassant Church and State Census in Moscow Significance of Science and Art Labor and Luxury To Women Why to Men Stupefy Themselves? Why Do People Stupify Themselves? The First Step Help for the Starving To God or Mammon Shame A Letter to Russian Liberals Two Wars Thou Shalt Not Kill Thoughts on God A Great Iniquity What the Orthodox Religion Really Is Last Message to Mankind For a Single Word I Cannot Be Silent A Comparison of America and Europe Patriotism and Government To the Working People The Slavery of Our Times Bethink Yourselves Reason and Religion How to Read the Gospels Nikolai Palkin A Terrible Question Help! Emigration of the Doukhobors What's to be Done? An Appeal to Russians