Tolstoy: War and Peace
Hailed as one of the best novels ever written, War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy is an epic sweep of war and love and family life set in 19th century Russia.
'War and Peace' by the Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy charts the story of Russia during the Napoleonic wars of the early 19th century, covering the pandemonium and brutality of the battlefield, as well as the equally intense dramas and loves of several families. It is a monumental novel, tracking the fortunes of dozens of brilliantly drawn individuals, with a cast of more than six hundred characters, both historical and fictional. So why is 'War and Peace' still such a compelling masterpiece, and why did Tolstoy later disown it?
Joining Bridget Kendall are Dr Galina Alexeeva, head of Research at Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy鈥檚 former country estate in Russia; Andrei Zorin, Professor of Russian at Oxford University and author of a new biography of Tolstoy, and Professor Donna Orwin, author of 'Simply Tolstoy', who鈥檚 from the University of Toronto in Canada.
(Image: Anthony Hopkins as Pierre Bezukhov in the 1972 大象传媒 20- part dramatization of Leo Tolstoy鈥檚 War and Peace. Credit: 大象传媒 Copyright pictures)
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