A Dark Brown Dog
product-details.title-label

A Dark Brown Dog

product-details.description-label
A dog. A child. A rope that drags, and a bond that tightens. In this brief, haunting tale, Stephen Crane casts a quiet, unflinching gaze at innocence, cruelty, and the strange bargains we make in the name of love. Told in spare, evocative prose, A Dark Brown Dog is more than it appears — a fable with no moral, a friendship with no promise, a home with no safety. You may not be sure where the pain ends and the loyalty begins. But you will know you've seen something true.
product-details.on-public-lists-label
product-details.on-public-lists-fallback-text
product-details.meta-data-label
product-details.publisher-label:
product-details.author-label:
product-details.title-label:
A Dark Brown Dog
product-details.read-by-label:
product-details.language-label:
EN
product-details.isbn-audio-label:
4069828626201
product-details.publication-date-label:
25 de junho de 2025
product-details.duration-label
15 min
product-details.product-type-label
AUDIO
product-details.explicit-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.radioplay-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.unabridged-label:
product-details.yes-label
product-details.about-author:
Stephen Crane (November 1, 1871 – June 5, 1900) was an American writer and journalist whose brief life produced some of the most enduring works of realism and early modernist literature. Best known for his Civil War novel The Red Badge of Courage (1895), Crane brought a raw, unflinching eye to human experience, often exploring fear, isolation, and moral ambiguity. Born in Newark, New Jersey, he was the 14th child of a Methodist minister. Crane began writing early and published his first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets (1893), at his own expense—a gritty portrayal of urban poverty that was ahead of its time. His later work as a war correspondent took him to Cuba, Greece, and the American West, experiences that sharpened his narrative voice. Despite chronic health problems and financial instability, Crane's output included poems, short stories, and journalism marked by vivid imagery and psychological depth. Stories like The Open Boat and A Dark Brown Dog reflect his innovative use of perspective and his fascination with fate and the indifference of nature. Crane died of tuberculosis in Germany at just 28. In that short span, he reshaped American fiction and influenced generations of writers to come.