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Collected Shorter Fiction Boxed Set

2 Volumes

Leo Tolstoy John Bayley Aylmer Maude Louise Maude

$130

Mixed media product

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Russian
Everyman Hardcovers
15 October 2001
Written over a period of more than half a century, Tolstoy’s enchanting short stories and novellas reflect every aspect of his developing art and outlook. Volume 1 of the Everyman Collected Shorter Fiction is dominated by the characteristic experiences of his early life as soldier, land-owner, husband and father, the life which shaped Anna Karenina and War and Peace. It also includes several short fables which point to his later preoccupation with the religious life. Volume 2 reveals how these spiritual intimations flowered into a series of extraordinary late masterpieces which equal anything in the earlier novels for intensity and power. Readers of The Death of Ivan Ilych, The Kreutzer Sonata, Father Sergius, Master and Man and Hadji Murad will recognize the brilliant younger novelist, now transfigured by his passionate quest for salvation and forgiveness.
By:  
Introduction by:  
Translated by:   , ,
Imprint:   Everyman Hardcovers
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 220mm,  Width: 142mm,  Spine: 92mm
Weight:   1.766kg
ISBN:   9781857152432
ISBN 10:   1857152433
Series:   Everyman's Library CLASSICS
Pages:   1856
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Mixed media product
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Collected Shorter Fiction Boxed Set (2 Volumes)

Obvious echoes of Kafka and subtler whiffs of William Gaddis's The Recognitions and Marguerite Young's Miss Macintosh, My Darling resound throughout this tantalizing metaphysical mystery, the second illustrated novel from the Canadian artist, photographer, and author of The Tattooed Map (1995). The protagonist and narrator, Helen Martin, is an art historian who specializes in medical illustration and who suffers harrowing physical and emotional dislocations while traveling across Europe in search, at first, of her errant husband Martin Evans, a freelance journalist who's scarcely part of her life anymore. On a train to Vienna, Helen meets the grotesque, menacing Rosa Kovslosky and almost immediately deduces that the older woman is somehow enacting a succubus-like exchange of body parts with her (while blandly reassuring the dumbfounded Helen that We all lose parts of ourselves from time to time ). The contents of a mysterious box left in her keeping, a series of encounters with shady (when not positively demonic) reality instructors and accomplices, and her (probably correct) inference that Martin had been investigating art forgeries all lead her to Budapest and Munich, among other locales - and to the inconclusive conclusion that the machinations of a wicked man who would do anything to turn the world of art on its ear have exposed her to the influences of people who reach from beyond the grave to set old wrongs right and exact vengeance. If all this sounds oppressive, it isn't - because Hodgson writes crisp, resonant, brainy sentences and filters a wealth of information through the consciousness of a heroine both intelligent and self-deprecating enough to realize she's a peculiarly vulnerable Western Alice adrift in an amusingly sophisticated and corrupt old European Wonderland. Further interest is provided by an intricate puzzle involving 16th-century Flemish anatomist Andreas Vesalius and by a plethora of gorgeously spooky anatomical illustrations. First-rate literate entertainment - and one of the year's most replete and unusual fictions. (Kirkus Reviews)


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