With typically disarming modesty, the author, Professor Reginald
Christian, writes in his preface, 'This is a book about a book, and
as such it is doubtful it would meet with Tolstoy's approval if he
were alive today. He goes on to say however, 'And yet people will
continue to write about Tolstoy, as they continue to write about
Shakespeare. The purpose of this book is in the first place to
acquaint the English reader with material which will facilitate an
understanding of the process of writing "War and Peace" - material
which for the most part has not been translated into English, and
which is not always obtainable in Russian: draft version of the
novel, Tolstoy's diaries, notebooks and letters, the historical and
biographical sources he used, and the secondary critical literature
about the novel. In the second place I have attempted to consider
certain aspects of the finished work - structural, linguistic, and
ideological - and to offer very briefly some possible lines of
approach to Tolstoy's art as a novelist.'
There are six chapters: The Evolution of the Novel, Use of
Sources, Idea and Genre, Structure and Composition, Language,
Characterization.
"War and Peace "is arguably the greatest novel ever written. If
any novel deserves this sort of critical anatomy it is "War and
Peace" especially when written by one of the greatest Tolstoy
scholars of the last one hundred years.
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