At the age of sixteen Vlas withdrew from school, and left home because of a desire to be amongst the people. Rather than doing social work as many former students did at the time, Vlas became a laborer and a dock worker. His time as a common worker was brief, though, and he soon found work as a proof-reader and actor. At seventeen he began writing for a paper called
The Moscow Flyer. During the 1880s he became a skillful journalist and critic, writing for popular papers such as
Entertainment, the
Petersburg Gazette, and the
Alarm Clock, which also employed the young writer
Anton Chekhov. In 1893 he moved to
Odessa to work as a reporter for the
Odessa Flyer, a local paper with a large circulation. He later visited France on assignment, where he was impressed by the
feuilleton style of journalism, a style he soon began using himself. This style was widely popular, but some literary figures, like
Zinaida Gippius and
Alexander Blok criticized it for being talentless and vulgar. In 1897 he traveled to
Sakhalin as part of a larger international assignment. He recorded his experiences and impressions in his book
Sakhalin, originally serialized in
Russian Wealth, ''God's World
, and other papers, and recently published in English translation by the Anthem Press as Russia's Penal Colony in the Far East''. From 1902 to 1918 he was the editor of the paper
Russian Word. He also gained fame as a novelist, short story writer, and religious commentator. Some of his published works were:
In the Promised Land (Palestine) 1900,
Mu-Shan: A Chinese Novel 1901, and
Legends and Stories of the East 1902. ==Later life==