War and Peace
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If youve never read it now is the moment. This translation will show that you don't read War and Peace you live it' The Times Tolstoy's enthralling epic depicts Russia's war with Napoleon and its effects on the lives of those caught up in the conflict.|Leo Tolstoy was born in central Russia on 9 September 1828. In 1852 he published his first work the autobiographical Childhood. He served in the army during the Crimean War and his Sevastopol Sketches (1855-6) are based on his experiences. His two most popular masterpieces are War and Peace (1864-69) and Anna Karenina (1875-8). He died in 20 November 1910.|'If you've never read it now is the moment. This translation will show that you don't read War and Peace you live it' The Times Tolstoy's enthralling epic depicts Russia's war with Napoleon and its effects on the lives of those caught up in the conflict. He creates some of the most vital and involving characters in literature as he follows the rise and fall of families in St Petersburg and Moscow who are linked by their personal and political relationships. His heroes are the thoughtful yet impulsive Pierre Bezukhov his ambitious friend Prince Andrei and the woman who becomes indispensable to both of them the enchanting Natasha Rostov.‘It is simply the greatest novel ever written. All human life is in it. If I were told there was time to read only a single book this would be it’ Andrew Marr|If you've never read it now is the moment. This translation will show that you don't read War and Peace you live it|This is at last a translation of War and Peace without the dreadful misunderstandings and improvements that plague all other translations of the novel into English. Pevear and Volokhonsky's supple and compelling translation is the closest that an English reader without Russian can get to Tolstoy's masterwork. This is a great achievement. It is hard to imagine how this translation could be superseded.|It is simply the greatest novel ever written. All human life is in it. If I were told there was time to read only a single book this would be it|Reveals Tolstoy in his majestic scope and precision to this reader for the first time unencumbered by the pidgin archaisms of previous translations ringing with mastery and truth|It may sound pretentious or strange but I can remember the weeks (three weeks to be precise) I spent reading War and Peace as a peak experience of sustained excitement and deep delight. Part of the delight was the largeness and strangeness of this world - the sense of the vastness and extremes of Russia the unboundedness of everything
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