The story presents the history of the Stepan Radchenko inner transformation. He is an energetic rural young man who arrives in
Kyiv to get into the economic university and return with new knowledge. Initially, Stepan had nothing in the capital of Ukraine. He settles in the suburbs, where life is not very different from rural areas. Later, he moved closer to the center and rented a separate apartment. At the novel's end, he feels himself the owner of the city: "It lies humbly beneath wavy rocks, marked by points of fire, and stretches him from the darkness of the hills sharp stone fingers." Stylistically, the story is
Impressionism: from fragments of things, people, and sounds, the author portrays the city. As Stepan assimilates to Kyiv, his perception changes. The transformation is portrayed through the change in clothes. Initially, the bureau secretary advises Radchenko to change style: "All the Ukrainian woes are because of dressing badly." Upon visiting the store with fashionable and expensive clothes, Stepan still believes that it should only change his appearance, not personality. However, when he moves to a new house, Stepan burns his old clothes. During the novel, one can observe that Stephen rises the ladder of the city life. In Kyiv, he became interested in literature, began writing, and got famous. He was convinced that he went to conquer the city. Stepan thought the city needed "fresh blood of the village" that would change "its appearance and being." Pidmohylnyi does not aim to make a documentary description of the writer's medium. He shows the author's birth, his successes and failures, and his wanderings in different worlds of the novel. The novel's last sentence ends at the instant when the story of Stepan Radchenko begins: "Then, in the silence of the lamp over the table, he wrote a story about people." == Characters ==