Costa/Whitbread Biography Award Winners
34 books |
2 voters
book data
21 ratings, 4.00 average rating, 4 reviews
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published
March 2001
by W. W. Norton & Company
binding
Paperback, 624 pages
isbn
0393321223
(isbn13: 9780393321227)
description
In this landmark biography of Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy, A.N. Wilson narrates the complex drama of the writer's life: his childhood of aristocrat...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 33)
Wilson does a superb job of painting Tolstoy as a person, a novelist, and an anarchist. That alone would be reason enough for praise, but Wilson goes further by also tying in larger themes - notably Russia, God, and literature.
Wilson demonstrates how Tolstoy's habitual self-obsession and deeply ingrained psychosis, along with a life of relative luxury and an obedient wife, enabled his amazing gift. Tolstoy's chaotic experiences at Chornaya Rechka, his revelatory readings of Schopenhauer, hi...more
Wilson demonstrates how Tolstoy's habitual self-obsession and deeply ingrained psychosis, along with a life of relative luxury and an obedient wife, enabled his amazing gift. Tolstoy's chaotic experiences at Chornaya Rechka, his revelatory readings of Schopenhauer, hi...more
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Read in January, 2006
Many biographers openly sympathize with their subjects. Often, this is because they want to emphasize their subject's centrality (as in McCullough's John Adams book) or complexity (as in Browne's Darwin biography) that had heretofore been unfairly ignored. For someone who claimed Gandhi and MLK Jr. as his acolytes, Wilson is pretty harsh on Tolstoy.
Wilson correctly perceives that we wouldn't be reading his biography of an impoverished and eccentric aristocrat in the final days of the Romano...more
Wilson correctly perceives that we wouldn't be reading his biography of an impoverished and eccentric aristocrat in the final days of the Romano...more
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Read in March, 2006
That beard merits 5 stars alone. It's hard to say whether it was A.N Wilson's writing or the uniqueness of Tolstoy's life that contributed mostly to the enjoyment of this book, but at least Wilson was able to present that uniqueness in an entertaining way. Being a shorter biography, Wilson naturally had to focus mostly on the highlights of Tolstoy's life, but he was able to connect them to events of the time as well as explore the social, philopsophical and intellectual underpinnings of Tolstoy'...more
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Extremely readable. Wilson I think is overly critical of Tolstoy's contradictions. Tolstoy's life and writing proves the difficulty of living morally. He is easy to make fun of, but he does not prove the impracticability of Christian anarchy.
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