Pages: 576 (Paperback) ISBN: 0140441840 Pub: Penguin Classics Pub date: 1973-04-26 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 147662
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Reader Reviews:Resurrection (0/0 people found this helpful)I'm only half way through this but I am just so surprised by it that I thought I'd write something.
One of the greatest novels ever written (1/2 people found this helpful)A superb vision of life in 19th-century Russia, it exposes the hypocrisies of state, property and law in an unrivalled manner. Brilliantly written. Masterwork. (14/17 people found this helpful)The 'Ressurection' came into my hands after having read virtually everything else by Tolstoy, and for it's lack of reputation caught me entirely by surprise. Here we find Tolstoy the great storyteller, a genius whose strong personality sometimes prevents him from understanding his characters. It is a great paradox that his would be the great literary heroines, like Anna Karenina, when it is in the characterization of women that a careful reader can notice a lack of intimate knowledge and real understanding. Yet in the background there is always a man, crucified between moral corectness and a hipocrisical society, each of those men a part of Tolstoy himself, and it is exactly in the deep, cruelly exact self-portrait that his mastery is undisputed. 'Ressurection' features a female character strong enough to carry a novel; yet it is the feeble male character that occupies our attention as we watch him shed the protection offered by the norms of his class, to search for redemption, or resurrection. It is a novel hard and unfrilled, yet there is something in its shattering sincerity, in the drama of its gestures, that makes it truly great. Together with 'War and Peace' and a short novel, 'Father Sergei', it is to be considered the pinnacle of Tolstoy's opus. absorbing (6/8 people found this helpful)A beautifully decriptive story set in Russia 100 years ago. Even the briefest characters are given personality and life, and also much humour. It took me several weeks to read the book, but it is so well written I found myself remembering exactly where i left the story, and never had to re-read any of it. Probably the first book I have ever read in which I can remember the story from start to finish. A proper 'old fashioned' tale, but with many thoughts and ideas which are equally relevant in todays society. A beautifully descriptive and yet somehow confused book (4/7 people found this helpful)This book is an epic story written towards the end of Tolstoy's life. Although the tale of two ex lovers going through a spiritual renewal together is moving, Tolstoy (whose self portrait lies in the protagonist Nekhlyudov) seems to be in a state of denial as to the true motives behind his hero's redemption. The book is higly readable though slightly repetitive at times and is interlaced with the genius of Tolstoy's descriptive powers and observations of mankind. Similar ProductsThe Kingdom of God Is Within You (Dover Books on Western Philosophy) Anna Karenina (Wordsworth Classics) A Confession (Dover Books on Western Philosophy) The Idiot (Wordsworth Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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