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Monday, July 13, 2015

145. War and Peace

War and Peace
Leo Tolstoy
1869
Around 1500 pages







The Book argues that this book is too often seen as a test of endurance for dedicated readers rather than the masterpiece it is.  I happen to see it as both.  To be honest, after Remembrance of Things Past, this seems like a magazine.

Since this book is approximately a million pages long, I will not go into a lot of detail about the plot.  The story follows a whole myriad of characters, including Pierre Bezukhov, a socially awkward illegitimate child, Natasha Rostova, a non socially awkward romantic, Napoleon, I assumed I don't need an explanation for, and Prince Andrey, a philosophical military officer.

Certainly you can argue that this book tends to get tedious.  Particularly in the War part of War and Peace.  But honestly, I didn't want it to end.  There is so much depth here that I would highly recommend reading it with a friend to help unpack some of the content.  Rich characters, rich experience.  It's nice to know that some of these epic doorstops can be worth it.  I am stressing the word "some," Herman Melville.

RATING: *****

Interesting Facts:

Any thoughts on the movie?  Here's a trailer:


Praised by...well, everybody.  Flaubert, Dostoyevsky, Hemingway, etc.


UP NEXT: He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope.  It is supposed to be around 850 pages.  Someone take his typewriter.

8 comments:

Catie-Chanel said...

I haven´t seen the American version, but I´ve seen the Russian and the "European" version (2008 I think) and they both were great. Of course, I read the book (I think 3 or 4 times) and I´m still in love with Andrey. This book is really perfect, especially about picturing the characters. I recommend everyone to read it!

Masanobu said...

"It's nice to know that some of these epic doorstops can be worth it. I am stressing the word "some," Herman Melville."

Awesome, as always. You're my spirit guide through the 1001 books quest.

Amanda said...

I agree. Andrey was hunky. So was Anatole but let's not go there.

Amanda said...

Thank you so much Masanobu! That means a lot!

Unknown said...

I read this book. It took me two years to chip away at it. Tolstoy is great at making you understand the essence of an individual but can be so long winded about everything. His 3 page analogy between post- evacuation Moscow and a dead Bee hive was particularly bizarre.
If remember correctly, Tolstoy was very prescient in his philosophy of history. He was one of the first to shy away from the Great Man theory and understand that history is influenced by each individual, not just a handful of men.

Unknown said...
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Amanda said...

That's really interesting! For some reason I don't mind when Tolstoy or Fielding rambles but I get mad when Melville does.

Dessie said...

I created myself a spreadsheet with graphs to track my daily progress reading War & Peace, to keep me focussed on the task in hand. And it worked. Once you get going, it's not actually a difficult read and small chapters help.

Anyway, I'm talking like a complete amateur here.

It struck me that it's actually little longer than Lord of the Rings, which these day's I don't consider so long. And it's a pamphlet when compared to the entirety of A Song of Ice and Fire (so far) or Wheel of Time. In fact, LotR was written in a classical style whereas W&P, despite being a century earlier, was written in a modern style for its time. So it reads like a more modern book.

For all its qualities, I could have done without the 18,000-word treatise on the rights and wrongs of academic historical analysis in the second appendix which my version concluded with. I understand that some translations exclude this.