Ivan Goncharov stands among the great voices of nineteenth-century Russian literature. Best known for his masterpiece Oblomov, he created one of fiction’s most enduring characters—an emblem of inertia, introspection, and the quiet tragedy of unrealized potential. With subtle irony and psychological depth, Goncharov explored the tensions between action and passivity, tradition and progress, comfort and responsibility. His prose is marked by careful observation, emotional nuance, and a profound un ...