Virgin Soil, written in 1877 and translated into English in
1896, was Ivan Turgenev's last novel and an appropriate end to his
career as a novelist. Its analysis of the future of Russia was
prescient as it sketches out the historical justification of the
Nihilist movement - why it was necessary - and then prophesises its
failure. The book caused Turgenev's final disgrace with the
Government and, like many other Russian writers before and after
him, he was exiled, although this took place after his death rather
than during his lifetime. Denied a public funeral and honours the
Government suppressed any public comments on his works and his
influence on Russian literature.
As Edward Garnett writes in his introduction to Virgin Soil in
1896 'to examine the characters of the novel is to see how
perfectly representative they are of Russian political life'.
Turgenev's genius was the ability to take a simple story line and
create an intricate and in-depth look at life in Russia as seen
through the eyes of ordinary Russians.
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