The story was a great success, and critics rightly called it one of the best stories in Soviet literature.
In 1989, an article entitled “Meetings with Gaidar” appeared in the newspaper “Arzamas Pravda, ” revealing that a woman living in Gorodets had met Arkady Gaidar in 1935 and became the prototype for the mother in “Chuk and Gek.”
Her name was Praskovya Stepanovna Seryogina. She was born on October 25, 1904, a few kilometers from Arzamas, along the banks of the Tesha River, in the village of Yamskaya Sloboda. When the girl turned 11, her mother died during childbirth. Her father remarried, but in 1920 his wife died of typhus. The household chores and caring for her father and three step-siblings fell on the 16-year-old girl. Praskovya contracted typhus, which caused complications with her eyes, and by the age of 18, she was nearly blind.
In 1935, Arkady Gaidar arrived in the village. He
settled in a house near the Seryogins’ and became a frequent visitor. He spent
long hours talking with Praskovya’s father, Stepan Alexandrovich. It was during
these visits that the writer learned about Praskovya Stepanovna’s life. When
she once asked him, “When do you write your books? I never see you with a pen
and paper, ” Gaidar replied,