March 1, 2011

Literary Pick (*)

Anna Karenina- Leo Tolstoy












This book took me too long to finish. Normally, I go through books faster than I go through towels, but Anna Karenina is true to Tolstoy's form, he writes beautifully, but what's missing is deep-rooted psychological honesty and emotion. Sometimes I think Tolstoy was too hung up on his own agenda of Puritanism to allow himself to be true to the realistic direction of human nature. For Tolstoy women belonged here, and men belonged there, and you read it in all of his books. He was also hung up on peasant-workers (muzhiks) and their rights, a topic that resurfaces in all of his works. Although his short stories, The Kruetzer Sonata and The Death of Ivan Illych are two of my all-time favorite stories, I'm glad I don't have to read any other of his larger works again.
I would like to say that the most disappointing part of the novel wasn't Anna's anti-climatic suicide, but Levin's totally superfluous character.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Love and Literature said...

I adored Anna Karenina! I think it a true masterpiece and one of the most important novels about a women, right up there with Madame Bovary. I found it wonderful in it's depiction of society and in particular was very moved by the portrayal of Anna's husband. I agree that Levin was jolly annoying and not at all necessary to the plot, but everything else I found rather perfect.

March 7, 2011 at 6:14 AM  

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