Anyone Interested in Tolstoy?
Hello everyone,
I just saw the film The Last Station about Tolstoy's last months and his impact on the Russian people, and it sparked my attention for Russian literature. Can anyone familiar with the genre offer a few entry points for someone who's looking to start exploring?
FYI : I have not read anything by Tolstoy or Dostoevesky, so practically anything is open game.
I just finished reading Tolstoy's 3rd and last novel:
Resurrection. Tolstoy's novels are very readable. You can start with his autobiographical novel which is really three novels generally bundled together:
Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth. Anna Karenina could be next. It is a good read and is not too difficult. War and Peace is very long, but not difficult to read once you have all the various families in the book straight in your mind. Many copies give you an outline of the families. Resurrection was his last novel. It is the story of a Russian nobleman who seduces a servant girl. Years later he is called to jury duty. That's right; the young girl he seduced is on trial for theft and murder while working in a bawdy house. The Prince feels that he is resposible for her downfall. the rest of the book tells how this confrontation changes his and the girl's life.
I probably like Dostoevsky more than Tolstoy. The order I read his four big novels is The Brothers Karamazov, The Possessed, The Idiot, and Crime and Punishment. I've also read his novel A Raw Youth. The Gambler, Notes from Underground, and The House of the Dead are also good.
For short stories and a change of pace try Chekov and Gogol.
For shorter novels, read Turgenev's Fathers and Sons and Torrents of Spring.
For a more modern novel, read Pasternack's Doctor Zhivago. You can also see the movie .... one of the best made by Hollywood with Julie Christy and Omar Shariff. Probably the best love story I have ever read.
Russian literature is some of the best in the world. There are more novels, short stories, and plays than I have listed here. Just plunge in and enjoy.