War-and-peace

Leo Tolstoy and Frederick Davidson

Overview

<p><p>set Against The Epic Backdrop Of The Napoleonic Wars And Inspired By Tolstoy's Own Family History, War And Peace Is Expertly Interpreted By Edward Petherbridge Who Brilliantly Defines The Varied And Different Characters That People This Celebrated Classic.</p><h3>the Barnes & Noble Review</h3><p>we Might As Well Face It At The Outset -- <i>war And Peace</i> Is A Big Book. In Length, Obviously: Nearly 1,250 Pages In This Translation By Richard Pevear And Larissa Volokhonsky. That Makes It Heavy To Lug Around, And When I Read It In Bed It Left A Dent In My Sternum. And It Requires A Big Commitment: Unless You Took The Same Speed Reading Course Woody Allen Did (he Read It In 20 Minutes And Reported: It Involved Russia), It Takes A Big Chunk Out Of Your Life To Read. It's Big In Ambition, Too: There's Tolstoy's, Of Course -- It Took Him More Than Ten Years To Write, Research, And Rewrite -- But Closer To Home, There's Yours, If This Is A Mission You Choose To Accept. Reading War And Peace -- Or Being Seen To Do So -- Is A Sign That You Are A Serious-to-the-verge-of-pretentious Person. The Few Times When I Was Caught Reading It In Public I Felt Sheepish.</p>

Details
Blackstone Audio, Inc.
9780786132898
MP3 Book
2004
EN
pages
***

Organize your reading life.

Track all your reads in one place. Custom shelves, reading goals, and more. No social stuff, no ads, no distractions.