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The Death of Ivan Ilyich (Pocket Penguin Classics) |  | Author: Leo Tolstoy Creator: Anthony Briggs Publisher: Penguin Classics Category: Book
List Price: £5.99 Buy New: £1.44 as of 29/7/2010 14:36 MDT details You Save: £4.55 (76%)
New (24) Used (8) Collectible (1) from £0.89
Seller: UKPaperbackshop Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 158179
Media: Paperback Edition: New Ed Pages: 112 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.3 x 0.6
ISBN: 0141023600 Dewey Decimal Number: 891.733 EAN: 9780141023601 ASIN: 0141023600
Publication Date: January 26, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Product Description Ivan Ilyich lies alone, dosed up on opium and deceived by doctors, haunted by memories and regrets. His faithful servant tends to his every need. But as he forces down false remedies and listens to empty promises, Ivan grows aware of one terrible truth. His wife and his children are not awaiting his recovery. They are waiting for him to die.
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| Customer Reviews: On reading Tolstoy for the first time January 16, 2009 Dennis Littrell (SoCal) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've been reluctant for decades to read the great Russian master because I never felt I had the time to tackle War and Peace or Anna Karenina. I suspect others have felt the same way and thereby missed reading one of the truly great literary artists to have ever lived. Put it off no more. Pick up this 317-page splendid collection of some of Leo Tolstoy's best stories including the celebrated "The Death of Ivan Ilyich."
There are six other stories, the most significant of which is perhaps the sad "Polikushka" which is just about as long as "Ivan Ilyich" and to my mind a bit better in some respects. I also very much liked "The Raid" and "The Woodfelling" which are starkly realistic stories about soldiers engaged and not engaged in battle told wistfully without phony heroics or needless sensationalism. In fact, every story is not just excellent, but deeply engaging, cathartic and transcending as only great literature can be.
You don't have to read more than a few pages before you are struck with the sheer majesty of Tolstoy's gargantuan narrative style, his command of all aspects of storytelling from the kind of deep understanding of character that one finds in Shakespeare, to the kind of descriptive power about people and their environs that can only come from someone with a prodigious memory, a sharp eye and an unusual ability to concentrate. Somehow Tolstoy always knows what to leave in and what to leave out. He knows how to describe without slowing down the tale or making the reader aware of "purple passages." Everything flows like the great Don as naturally as breathing, but with a massive density of observation and experience, both intellectual and emotional, that frankly leaves this scribe in awe.
Tolstoy reminds me of Guy de Maupassant in his realistic depictions of peasant and bourgeois life, except that--hard to believe--he is even better! Furthermore, Tolstoy displays in a restrained and subtle manner a deep love for his characters. Again like Shakespeare he understands the psychology of the high and the low and is sympathetic to their struggles. Even though Ivan Ilyich was a self-important and pitiless magistrate who lived something close to an empty, unobserved life, which Tolstoy presents without rancor or pity, there is nonetheless a sense, especially toward the end, of compassion and empathy for a man who, although elevated in society, really didn't know any better than to blindly follow an animal bourgeois existence.
Although some of the stories are written in the first person Tolstoy stands back and is uninvolved, a seeing eye and a listening ear. Because of his great narrative power, Tolstoy even in the first person seems almost god-like in his point of view. He sees the landscapes and the trees and little children with their soft skin and plaintive cries, and he sees the blowhards and the hypocrites, the pathetic and the drunk, and the stupid, and treats them all the same. For the most part, at any rate. Sometimes his gaze favors some and disparages others. He is both objective and subjective, both a literary artist who values truth with a capital "T" and someone who cares deeply about these people he has invented/imagined/observed and remembered. He presents such an incredibly rich and vivid portrait of life in 19th century Russia that you feel you are there in the bitter cold beneath high blue skies, wearing the rags and the birch bark boots, smoking the cheap tobacco and throwing back the oily vodka, sleeping five to a bed listening to the cockroaches near the stove in the black of night, fearful of death and crossing yourself before icons, and all the while dreaming of something grand and laughing uneasily at the absurdity of life and shivering at the inevitability of death.
Yes, this collection, as Anthony Briggs, one of the translators, says in his fine introduction, is about death. Ivan Ilyich dies, but many others also die. Some in battle, some in bravado, some by accident and some by their own hand. Some foolishly, some painfully, some without a notion of why or what for, but all of them essentially alone. Tolstoy focuses intently on this dying and goes deep into the souls of those dying, how they cling to life and rationalize away what is to come and what they have done, lying to themselves; and how others take it as their due, without self-pity, without a word, just a hand to the chest and a stoppage of life, and then a report, some words exchanged, a bit of gossip about so-and-so who is now gone.
But as Carl Sandburg told us, the grass will still grow and cover all, and life will go on, and again the same delusions and appetites and vanities will be propagated and the same pain and suffering, the same petty quarrels and petty delights, snatches of beauty amidst the ugly squalor will be seen again, and, as at the ending of "The Raid," a sonorous voice will once again lift itself into the air in song, and the men will move quietly on to a new task, a new beginning, toward a final ending somewhere down the long and dusty road.
Moving and progressively grimmer as the story develops September 21, 2007 John Hopper (London, UK) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
The thoughts and feelings of a man towards his family and those around him as he gets progressively more ill and is then dying from a wasting disease that sounds like cancer. The opening chapters are quite light-hearted with some ruefully amusing reflections on marriage and attitudes towards ones career, but then the mood becomes much darker and he ends being cynical about his family, seeing them as wishing his death to come sooner so they can be free of the burden of caring for him. A short story but one with a lot to say about the human condition and by no means necessarily tied to its Russian background.
One of the best things Tolstoy ever wrote June 7, 2005 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
As Wittgenstein said 'Death is not an event in life'. In Tolstoy's narrative we see frequently how those still living are unsure of how to react in a genuine way to those dying, and instead fall back on their normal habits and approaches to life - one character early on won't let Ivan's death stop him from his evening routine of gambling. Ivan's widow is, between her sobs, concerned that she should get the maximum amount possible from the government to cover his funeral. It's touches like these which bring to mind Auden's 'Musee des beaux Arts', and also make the narrative ring as true as as it does. Another significant strand to the story is Ivan's relationship with his servant Gerasim, who cares for him as he approaches death. Gerasim is different from many other characters in that he is able to deal with the dying Ivan in a way that is not disgusted, patronising or false. He is the one character who is actually able to relate to him genuinely as he is dying. And this is one of Tolstoy's more didactic points that he sneaks into this narrative of dying, that he sees peasants as being more authentic than the aristocracy of which he was so much a part. But the didacticness never gets in the way of the story, as it arguably does in some of Tolstoy's longer works, and 'The Death of Ivan Ilyich' shows Tolstoy at his most concentratedly brilliant. The translation of this Hesperus Press edition is excellent, and the story is also supplemented by 'The Devil', a story about an aristocrat falling in love/lust with a peasant girl, and its unhappy consequences. While it may not be quite 'The Death of Ivan Ilyich', 'The Devil' is still worth reading. Altogether, a very worthwhile buy.
short for this author but still genial January 29, 2003 Carlos Vazquez Quintana (Linares- Spain) 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Ivan Ilych is a magistrate in a province out of Moscow. He's the pure sample of a sort of functionarial middle class plenty of mediocrity. However indeed Ilych thinks about himself he's an important foreman because he's not as other Russian judges, driven by passions and immoderate, but he never let see any emotion in his decisions. Unfortunately, Ivan falls badly ill significantly just when he goes to open his new house at the peak of his career when he's hanging some curtains -a stupid task for so brilliant man, here too much impatient- and he receives a bad hurt. I think from this incident Tolstoi, which in real life hated the physicians, darkens the nature of the infirmity of Ivan confusing the symptoms of these bad hit in the abdomen than becomes very painful. Truly I think as Tolstoi later describes the disease, these are an abdominal cancer. As it were, Ivan's wife calls the more reputed doctors, but the physicians are presented as a bunch of true idiots and Ivan Ilych goes from bad to poor and finally ends in the worst. Furthermore his wife is unable to accept these situation while Ilych surrenders to the disease and the terrible pain, that only a mujik or illiterate Russian peasant is capable to relief, so the author recurs to his permanent idea that only "pure" uncontaminated people are good enough to suffer and know the truth of life, a very discussable opinion. This short novel I think contains all the genius of Tolstoi in a condensed form, as if were War and Peace, and exposes a masterpiece at the reach of everybody.
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