Doctor Zhivago (Hardcover)

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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0679407596
ISBN-13: 9780679407591
Buy.com Sku: 30116343
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Pages:  648
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On they went, singing "Rest Eternal," and whenever they stopped, their feet, the horses, and the gusts of wind seemed to carry on their singing. (from the first line)
(Book Jacket Status: Jacketed)
In the grand tradition of the epic novel, Boris Pasternak's masterpiece brings to life the drama and immensity of the Russian Revolution through the story of the gifted physician-poet, Zhivago; the revolutionary, Strelnikov; and Lara, the passionate woman they both love. Caught up in the great events of politics and war that eventually destroy him and millions of others, Zhivago clings to the private world of family life and love, embodied especially in the magical Lara.
First published in Italy in 1957, "Doctor Zhivago "was not allowed to appear in the Soviet Union until 1987, twenty-seven years after the author's death.
Translated by Manya Harari and Max Hayward
From the Publisher:
(Book Jacket Status: Jacketed)

In the grand tradition of the epic novel, Boris Pasternak's masterpiece brings to life the drama and immensity of the Russian Revolution through the story of the gifted physician-poet, Zhivago; the revolutionary, Strelnikov; and Lara, the passionate woman they both love. Caught up in the great events of politics and war that eventually destroy him and millions of others, Zhivago clings to the private world of family life and love, embodied especially in the magical Lara.

First published in Italy in 1957, Doctor Zhivago was not allowed to appear in the Soviet Union until 1987, twenty-seven years after the author's death.

Translated by Manya Harari and Max Hayward
Annotation:
The story behind the "real-life" odyssey of Boris Pasternak's epic novel DR. ZHIVAGO is perhaps more stirring than the narrative of the book itself. Pasternak, a renowned poet in his native Russia, worked on the novel periodically for more than 40 years before submitting it for publication. The book was rejected by Soviet officials who disagreed with its portrayal of the disintegration of the Bolshevik cause under Stalin. Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, an Italian publisher and communist activist, smuggled the manuscript out of Russia and published it in 1957. Riding the publicity of this scandal, the book became an international bestseller, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958, though Pasternak had to refuse the award under pressure from Soviet officials. In 1987, 27 years after Pasternak's death, the Soviet ban was lifted and one of the greatest masterpieces of Russian literature was finally published in Russia.||It is the story of a pure-hearted doctor and poet who acts as a reluctant witness to the momentous events surrounding the meteoric rise and inexorable decline of Soviet communism. Dr. Zhivago wants nothing more than a quiet life, helping to heal the sick, loving his family, and transforming the beauty he sees all around him into poetry. He tries to act as the voice of reason during the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and the brutal civil war that followed, but the forces at work are far too strong to be contained by a single man. Meanwhile, Zhivago struggles to stay true to his wife, Tonya, and their children, even though his heart truly belongs to Lara, a true love from his past who was swept away in the tide of the revolution. The sheer, stunning breadth of the novel, which is rich with the images and wisdom Pasternak accumulated as he lived the very events he portrays, marks it as one of the greatest works of 20th century literature.
Author Bio
Boris Leonidovich Pasternak
Boris Leonidovich Pasternak's father was a painter and his mother a pianist, and he was raised in an artistic, intellectual home. As an adolescent, Pasternak intended to become a composer, but he gave up music at age 19 and began to write verse. He published his first collection of poetry in 1914. During the First World War, Pasternak managed a draft board in the Urals. After the revolution, he worked briefly in the new education ministry. He continued to write poetry and prose, and his fame grew in the 1920s with each volume of poetry he published. When the Great Terror began in mid-1930s, he stopped publishing new poetry and made his living by translating works into Russian, especially the works of Shakespeare and Goethe. He defended his fellow poets (e.g., Mandelshtam) during the purges; his fame, and the regard Stalin had for his work, protected him during that time. Pasternak worked as a war correspondent during the Second World War. Throughout the 1940s and early 1950s he worked on his novel, DOCTOR ZHIVAGO. The novel ran into trouble with Soviet censors when Pasternak presented it for publication in 1956. He arranged for it to be published in Italy, and the last four years of his life were spent attending to the fallout from that decision. He refused the award of the Nobel Prize in literature in 1958 in a successful effort to stem the persecution campaign against him in the Soviet Union.
Praise
"...now I am writing something entirely different: something new, quite new, luminous, elegant, harmonious, well-proportioned, classically pure and simple--what Winckelmann wanted, yes, and Goethe; and this will be my last word, and most important word, to the world. It is, yes, it is what I wish to be remembered by; I shall devote the rest of my life to it." - Boris Pasternak 1945

"I began to read 'Doctor Zhivago' immediately on leaving [Pasternak], and finished it on the following day. Unlike some of its readers in both the Soviet Union and the west, I thought it a work of genius. It seemed--and seems to me to convey an entire range of human experience, to create a world, even if it contains only one genuine inhabitant, in language of unexampled imaginative power." - Sir Isaiah Berlin

"'Doctor Zhivago' will come to stand as one of the great events in man's literary and moral history. Nobody could have written it in a totalitarian state and turned it loose on the world who did not have the courage of a genius. This book is a great act of faith in art and in the human spirit." - Edmund Wilson

Read A Chapter

Part One
 
The Five O''Clock Express
 
1
 
They walked and walked and sang "Memory Eternal,"1 and when they stopped, it seemed that the song went on being repeated by their feet, the horses, the gusts of wind.
 
Passers-by made way for the cortège, counted the wreaths, crossed themselves.  The curious joined the procession, asked:  "Who''s being buried?"  "Zhivago," came the answer.  "So that''s it.  Now I see."  "Not him.  Her."  "It''s all the same.  God rest her soul.  A rich funeral."
 
The last minutes flashed by, numbered, irrevocable.  "The earth is the Lord''s and the fullness thereof; the world, and those that dwell therein."  The priest, tracing a cross, threw a handful of earth onto Marya Nikolaevna.  They sang "With the souls of the righteous."  A terrible bustle began.  The coffin was closed, nailed shut, lowered in.  A rain of cl

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