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    National Endowment for the Arts

    READER'S GUIDE

    INSTITUTE ol . .,MuseurriandLibrarySERVICES

    LEO TOLSTOY'SThe Death ofIvan llyich

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    The goal of theartist is not tosolve a questionirrefutably, but toforce people tolove life in all itsinnumerable,inexhaustiblemanifestations."LEO TOLSTOY

    from an 1 865 letter

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    Preface

    No author ever wrote greater fiction than Leo Tolstoy, andhe never wrote a more powerful work than The Death of IvanWyich. This stark, compelling, and concise book dealsquiteliterallywith matters of life and death. I have read this startlingnovella at least ten times, and I never finish it without a senseof awe and wonder at how profoundly Tolstoy reveals the heightsand depths of our common humanity.

    The Big Read is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Artsdesigned to revitalize the role of literary reading in American popularculture. Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America, a 2004 NEAreport, identified a critical decline in reading for pleasure among Americanadults. The Big Read aims to address this issue directly by providing citizenswith the opportunity to read and discuss a single book within theircommunities.

    A great book combines enlightenment with enchantment. It awakens ourimagination and enlarges our humanity. It can even offer harrowing insightsthat somehow console and comfort us. Whether you're a regular readeralready or a nonreader making up for lost time, thank you for joiningthe Big Read.

    ^dm.^^'Dana GioiaChairman, National Endowment for the Arts

    Leo Tolstoy, 1854

    National Endowment for the Arts THE BIG READ

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    Introduction to the Novella

    Leo Tolstoys The Death ofIvanIlyich (1886) begins at the funeral ofits title character, a 45-year-oldRussian judge whose death isannounced on the first page.But Chapter Two's opening wordsreveal a more alarming reality: "IvanIlyichs life had been most simpleand commonplaceand mosthorrifying." The omniscient narratortakes the reader back to Ivan's happychildhood, predictable youth, andambitious adulthood. PraskovyaFedorovna falls in love with him, sohe marries her. In less than a year,his discontentment leads him toescape into work and his favoritepastime, playing cards. In time, hebuys a house, and Praskovya bears

    five children, three ofwhom die. Heshrewdly climbs the Russian socialladder and receives an impressiveincome. The couple moves to anew city, buys a bigger house, andavoids genuine intimacy. Theycontinue their comfortable,contented lives for almost twodecades.

    Then one day, Ivan Ilyichs lifeunexpectedly changes. Whilehanging curtains in his house, hefalls off a ladder, receiving a minorbruise. Only in retrospect does thismundane moment loom as his most,perilous. An excruciating physicaldecline begins, and Russia's mostaccomplished doctors can onlyoffer morphine to ease his pain.

    'The awful, terrible act of his dying was,he could see, reduced by those aroundim to the level of a casual, unpleasant,Jmost indecorous incident...and this

    was done by that very decorum whichhe had served his whole life long."from The Death ofIvan Ilyich

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    Tolstoys psychological insight andvivid descriptions encourage areader's empathy. We feel Ivan'shelpless despair^ the misery of hiswife, and the apathy of his adultdaughter. But we also see thecompassion of a peasant boy andthe sorrow of Ivan's 13-year-oldson, whose final gesture may triggerthe most important moment ofIvan's life.

    The Death ofIvan Ilyich transportsthe reader to 19th-century Russia, aworld that may seem remote to21st-century Americans. CertainlyTolstoy grounds his novella in aparticular social, political, andreligious context. But the universalquestions transcend time and place:

    What provides true happiness?What does it mean to live a goodlife? Does God exist? If so, whywould He allow suffering? Whatis one's responsibility to otherhuman beings?Perhaps most of all, Ivan's"commonplace" and "horrifying"life challenges us to consider ourmortality, for whether by disease,disaster, or an accidental fall, wealllike himwill die. Tolstoydoesn't prescribe an answer forIvan, or for us. But he does offera work of art that he intended as"a means ofcommunion amongpeople." In this way, his novellacan illuminate even the darkesthuman truths.

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    Leo Tolstoy (1 828-1 91 0)

    Count Lev (Leo) NikolayevichTolstoy was born in 1828 intoone of Russia's oldest noblefamilies. After the death of bothparents before age nine, theintensely sensitive boy wasbrought up by an aunt livingin Kazan, Russia. There heeventually enrolled inthe university, but thinking hisprofessors incompetent, Tolstoyreturned to his estate atYasnaya Polyana, where heunsuccessfully attemptedagricultural reform. Thedisillusioned young man thenenlisted in the army, where hewrote voraciously, published hisfirst works, and indulged ingambling sprees, drinking binges,and chronic womanizing.

    Tolstoy among his family and guests, 1 887.

    After his marriage at 34 to a cheerfulyoung Sophia Andreyevna Behrs,Tolstoys life brimmed with the joysof family and creativity, includingthe eventual birth of 13 childrenand the writing of his epicmasterpiece, War andPeace (1863-

    THE LIFE AND TIMES OF LEO TOLSTOY1820sAlexander I dies in 1825, endinga reign that began in 1801.Poet Alexander Pushkin beginswriting Eugene Onegin, 1825.Decembrist Revolt fails to preventthe ascension of Alexander'sbrother Nicholas 1, 1825.Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy born atYasnaya Polyana, August 28,1828.

    1830sA nationalist revival leads to ageneral insurrection in 1830(known as the NovemberRevolution) in Russian Poland.The uprising is defeated in 1831.Tolstoy's mother dies when he istwo; his father, when he is eight.The first Russian railroad is built,connecting St. Petersburg withthe royal residence atTsarskoyeSelo, 1 838.

    1840sPyotr llyich Tchaikovsky bom,1840. He will become one ofRussia's greatest composers withsuch ballets as Swan Lake(1 875-6) and The Nutcracker(1891-2).Tolstoy enters Kazan University tostudy Oriental languages, 1845;moves to St. Petersburg to takelaw exams but runs up hugegambling debts, 1849.

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    69). But in 1869, Tolstoy endured amajor spiritual crisis that lastedthrough the 1 870s, while he waswriting Anna Karenina (1873-77).The orderly foundation upon whichthe past sixteen years had restedseemed fatally cracked: "Is there anymeaning in my life that will not bedestroyed by my inevitablyapproaching death?", Tolstoy askedin his Confession (1880). He couldno longer bear the burden of hisconventionally successful life, whichhe believed he had achieved at greatmoral cost, by blindly following thedictates of upper-class society.This spiritual awakening movedTolstoy to dedicate the next twentyyears to writing religious parables,stories, and novellas, such as TheDeath ofIvan Ilyich (1886), intended

    to awaken readers' existentialconsciousness. He also wrotepowerful polemical essays exposingthe injustices of the state, ofserfdom, of the Russian OrthodoxChurch, and concerning modernmedicine, education, marriage, andsexual mores. So commanding washis moral stature that leadingstatesmen, activists, and artists fromacross the globe wrote to Tolstoyand visited him at Yasnaya Polyanain search of spiritual illumination.Some said there were two tsars inRussia's late nineteenth century,Nikolai II and Leo Tolstoyand

    Tolstoy and SophiaAndreyevna Behrs ontheir 48th weddinganniversary, September23,1910.

    1870sTolstoy's first publication, anautobiographical novel titledChildhood (1852), appearsanonymously.Dostoevsky exiled by Nicholas I toSiberian prison camp, 1850-4.Nicolas I dies; reign of AlexanderII begins, 1855.The Crimean WarbetweenRussia and the combined forcesof mostly Britain, France, and theOttoman Empirebegins, 1853.The Peace of Paris ends it, 1856.

    Alexander IPs emancipation ofserfs transforms the Russianeconomy, beginning a series ofreforms, 1861.United States Civil War, 1 861 -65.Victor Hugo's Les Miserables ispublished, one of Tolstoy'sfavorite novels, 1862.Tolstoy serializes Warand Peacein a Russian journal, 1863-9;published as a complete novel in1869.

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    Franco-Prussian War begins, July1870.Tolstoy serializes Anna Kareninain the "thick journal" The RussianHerald, 1873-7; published as acomplete novel in 1877.Dostoevsky publishes TheBrothers Karamazov, 1 880.

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    that Tolstoy was the more tespectedof the two.As Tolstoys questioning of moderncivilization deepened, he grewincreasingly estranged from his wifeovet differences of lifestyle, finances,and the raising of their children.Tolstoy left his home in the middleof the night in September 1910,when he was 82, presumably toescape to a monastery. This finaleffort to find a life free of falsehoodand moral compromise ended onlyten days later, when he died ofpneumonia at the Astapova trainstation in a small rural Russian townon November 7, 1910.Tolstoy's life journey, like that of hissearching characters, was filled with

    contradiction and the spirit ofhuman possibility. He once wrote:"Man is flowing. In him there are allpossibilities: he was stupid, now heis clever; he was evil, now he isgood, and the other way around.In this is the greamess of man."Tolstoys own life is a crowningillustration of these humane andinspiring words.

    Tolstoy telling a story to hisgrandchildren, 1909.

    THE LIFE AND TIMES OF LEO TOLSTOY1880sAlexander II is assassinated,1 881 ; Alexander Ill's rule begins.Tolstoy begins his IntermediaryPublishing Company, throughwhich he publishes The Death oflvanllyich,-\8ffi.

    Anna Akhmatova bom, 1 889, theRussian poet who will ultimatelybecome a voice of the peopleunder Stalin's regime.

    1890sCentral and SouthwesternRussia faces severe famineand drought, 1892.Gandhi is inspired by readingTolstoy's "The Kingdom of God IsWithin You," 1894.Alexander Ill's reign ends, 1894;Nicholas II 's reign will last until1917.Russian playwright Chekhov'sThe Seagull first performed,1896.

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    1900sAmerican Senator WilliamJennings Bryan visits Tolstoy atYasnaya Polyana, 1903.Russo-Japanese War in Korea,1 904-5. Jack London is the onlyAmerican journalist to get nearthe front.Tolstoy's final masterpiece, HadjiMurad, completed in 1904.Russia simmers as workersstorm the Winter Palace inMoscow on "Bloody Sunday,"Januarys, 1905.

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    Tolstoy and Christianity

    Like many 1 9th-century Russians,Leo Tolstoy was born into theRussian Orthodox Church, but hestruggled with a search for God hiswhole life, as did many of hisfictional characters. By the early1880s, Tolstoy could no longeraccept the dogma, sacraments, orauthority of the Russian OrthodoxChurch. He was disturbed by thereligious hypocrisy of the upperclasses, as well as by their pursuit ofwealth and power. Tolstoy was alsobothered by the repressive policiesof the state, especially when state-sponsored violence was justified onsupposedly Christian grounds.Tolstoy left the Church, never toreturn.

    He rejected the debauchery of hisyouth and perceived that hisconventionally successful life hadcome at great moral cost. Tolstoyrepudiated his earlier literarymasterpieces and renounced hiswealth to live as a peasant, believingthat the Christian faith of theRussian peasantry was morallysuperior to that of the upper classes.That superiority is reflected in thepeasant boy, Gerasim, in The LDeath ofIvan Ilyich. |

    By the time Tolstoy published hisConfession and "What I Believe"(1884), he had begun to attractdisciples. His powerful 1 894polemical essay, "The Kingdom ofGod Is Within You," which laterinspired Gandhi, ultimately led toTolstoy's excommunication from theRussian Orthodox Church in 1901.Torrents of visitors came to YasnayaPolyana to discuss the principles ofTolstoy's self-created religion,"Tolstoyanism," which was based onan interpretation of the NewTestament's Gospels without themiracles. Those principles are thathumans manifest God's presence inthe world through selfless acts ofdevotion to others; that personalsalvation is available if one followsthis path of love; and that non-resistance is the only godly responseto evil in the world.

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    Tolstoy's Russia

    Tsar Peter theGreat

    Modern Russian history begins inthe 18th century with Tsar Peter theGreat (1672-1725), an imposingseven-foot-tall man who sometimessettled political disagreements byhitting his opponents in the headwith a club. He just as brazenlyattempted to transform hiseconomically and politically

    backward country into apowerful modern empire byWesternizing all aspects ofRussian society. A centurylater, Count Leo Tolstoy, aFrench-speaking nobleman,would become the proudbeneficiary of the modernsociety Tsar Peter created.But Tolstoy also would be

    tormented by the fact that his socialpower and financial comfort werebuilt on the backs of Russia'sunderprivileged serfs, whocomprised 90 percent of thepopulation.

    Tolstoys ambivalence about themodernization of Russia deepenedwhen the Great Reforms ofAlexander II, in the 1 860s,introduced Western-style politicaland social freedoms even moreextensive than those of Peter theGreat. Moreover, an industrialrevolution similar to that of

    TsarAlexander

    Victorian England now took place.Young people of all classes beganmigrating from the peacefulcountryside to the busding newcities in search of professional

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    opportunities. Many families thatonce lived together in rural Russiabecame spread out, and the closerelationship between the serfs andtheir aristocratic masters dissolved.

    While many thinkers and writersgreeted these changes enthusiastically,others, such as Tolstoy, were deeplyconcerned about the breakdown ofthe traditional Russian social fabric.Tolstoy observed the rise of a newclass of professional merchants,lawyers, and doctors, who embodiedthe Western values of materialismand individualism at the expense ofthe traditional Russian ideals ofcommunity and compassion.

    It is no wonder Tolstoy loved theBritish writer Charles Dickens,whom he considered a kindredspirit in the fight to raise peoplesawareness about the human costs ofmodern "progress." Tolstoy believedthat only by vigorously casting offthe internalized falsehoods ofmodern society could Russiansorany human beingsreturn to theiroriginal state of natural goodness.Tolstoy's fiction, such as AnnaKarenina and The Death ofIvanIfyich, depicts a broken worldheaded for moral disaster, unlesshonest introspection and spiritualtransformation begin to occur.

    Card-playingyM A popular pastime in 1 9th-century Russia, bridge and whist werem especially prevalent among upper-class men. In his twenties,m Tolstoy obsessively played cards, and a substantial gambling debtm even forced him to sell his family home when he was 27. In an 1890I polemical essay'Why Do Men StupefyThemselves?", Tolstoy wrote:' "For people of dull, limited moral feeling, the external diversions areoften quite sufficient to blind them to the indications conscience givesof the wrongness of their lives." Tolstoy described card-playing in hisfiction not only to heighten the sense of social reality but also to makepsychological observations about his characters. For Ivan llyich card-playing is, like almost everything else he does, an empty, soul-numbinghabit, a culturally acceptable excuse to avoid honest introspection andgenuine intimacy with other people.

    Uf

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    Tolstoy and Russian Literature

    "A great writer is, so tospeak, a second government.That's why no regimeanywhere has ever loved itsgreat writers, only its minorones."ALEXANDER SOLZHENTTSYN

    from The First Circle

    Americans might take for grantedtheir democratic rights and freedomof the press, but until Soviet leaderMikhail Gorbachevs reforms in themid-1980s, Russians knew neither.The authoritarian tsarist empire wasreplaced by an even more repressiveSoviet regime, which not onlyeliminated political and socialfreedoms but banned religion aswell. In such a country, the writerunderstandably was celebrated bythe people and feared by thegovernment as the voice of truthand the conscience of a nation.With few other oudets for openpublic debate, Russians have alwaysviewed the writer as their nationalstoryteller, social commentator,philosopher, psychologist, spiritualleader, and freedom-fighter onbehalf of the people.One of the recurrent symbols inRussian literature and culture is theimage of the writer as a Christ-like

    martyr on behalf of the people.The persistence of this symbol arisesfrom the fact that under both thetsars and the Soviets, major writerspaid with their freedoms or theirlives for what they wrote. In thenineteenth century, AlexanderPushkin, the celebrated poet andfather ofmodern Russian literature,was exiled by Tsar Nicholas I to theRussian South. Fyodor Dostoevskywas condemned to death and almostexecuted before the sentence wascommuted to four years of exile withhard labor in a Siberian prison camp.These experiences direcdy influencedhis harrowing masterpieces Notesfrom the Underground (1860) andCrime andPunishment (1866). Forhis radical religious beliefs, Tolstoywas excommunicated from theRussian Orthodox Church by TsarNicholas II. In the twentiethcentury, the Jewish writer Isaac Babel(1894-1940) was executed by theSoviet government. The poet OsipMandelshtam (1891-1938), arrestedtwice, died in a prison transit campin Siberia. Alexander Solzhenitsynspent eight years as a politicalprisoner in a Soviet labor camp,which he describes in hismonumental work ofdocumentation, The GulagArchipelago (1973-78), and his short

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    /.'Ui fTolstoy at his desk,1908.

    novel One Day in the Life ofIvanDenisovich (1962).

    The classic Russian writers remaininfluential in Russia today.Thousands ofmonuments,educational institutions, streets, andcities carry their names. An averageRussian can recite from memorypassages by favorite poets, andRussians frequently speak of theirliterary characters as if they werealive. In a sense, they are. AsRussians go through a challengingtransition from socialism tocapitalism, they still look to theirliterary classics for inspiration andanswers to that perennial Russianquestion: Kak zhit? How to live?If you want to read otherRussian novels, you mightenjoy:Fathers and Sonsby IvanTurgenev (1862)Crime and Punishmentby Fyodor Dostoevsky ( 1 866)Doctor Zhivagoby Boris Pasternak (1958)

    PronouncingRussian NamesRussian middle names are called'patronymics', and they are formed fromthe father's first name. It is customary inprofessional contexts to call a person byhis or her first name and patronymic, butrarely by the last name. In more intimatesurroundingsat home for instanceitis customary to use a person's first nameonly, or the diminutive form.

    Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy(lyeff nee-kuh-LIE-uh-veech tahl-STOY)

    Characters from The Death ofIvan llyichIvan llych Golovin(ee-VAHN ee-LEECH guh-lah-VEEN)the novel's protagonistPraskovya Fedorovna(prah-SKOHV-yuh FYOH-duh-ruhv-nuh)Ivan llyich's wifeVladimir Ivanovich(vlah-DEE-meer ee-VAHN-uh-veech):Ivan llyich's sonLiza(LEE-zuh)Ivan llyich's daughterFedor Petrovich(FYOH-duhr pee-TROH-veech)Liza's fiancee

    Acquaintances of Ivan llyichPeter Ivanovich(PYOH-tuhr ee-VAHN-uh-veech)FedorVasilievich(FYOH-duhr vah-SEE-lee-eh-veech)Zakhar Ivanovich(zah-KHAR ee-VAHN-uh-veech)Gerasim(gee-RAH-seem)a peasant boy who works for Ivan llyich

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    Tolstoy and His OtherWorks

    Tolstoys collected works fill ninetyvolumes, and they include novels,novellas, short stories, plays, essays,poetry, and thousands ofpages ofdiaries and personal letters. Ineverything he wrote Tolstoy stroveto expose falsehood, celebratehuman goodness, and inspire peopleto "love life in all its innumerable,inexhaustible manifestations."

    His novels War and Peace (1863-69)and Anna Karenina (1873-77) areconsidered among the greatestcreations ofworld literature. Warand Peace immortalizes the quietheroism and spiritual strength of theRussian people in the years leadingup to and including Russia's warswith Napoleon from 1805-1812. Inapproximately 1,500 pages, Tolstoymoves back and forth betweenprivate lives and public spectacles,ballrooms and battles, marriages andmassacres. No character is too smalland no subject too large for this epicmasterpiece. War and Peace inspiredthe American writer and criticHenry James to call Tolstoy "areflector as vast as a natural lake; amonster harnessed to his greatsubjectall ofhuman life!"While War and Peace is a grand,free-flowing celebration of life, Anna

    The Kingdom of GcIs Within You

    L

    1 < &Y9t^'*tI

    Karenina is more like a taught stringready to snap. It is a novel less aboutlife's infinite possibilities than aboutthe difficult choices people mustmake in a society that has lost itsspiritual moorings. Set in the decadefollowing the Great Reforms ofAlexander II, Anna Karenina reflectsTolstoy's personal struggles withfaith and his deep mistrust ofmodern "progress." The novel is

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    built on the contrast between twocouplesone doomed, the otherblessedand their efforts to findhappiness and meaning in a coldworld consumed by falsehood,hypocrisy, and materialism.IfAnna Karenina describes man'ssearch for meaning in a morallyconfused society, then Resurrection(1902) depicts the individualsdifficult journey back to spiritualhealth in a world that already hasfallen. In his most ideological novel,Tolstoy brilliandy combines stingingsocial commentary with astoundingpsychological realism.

    Tolstoys final novel-masterpiece,Hadji Murdd (1904), tells the storyof Russia's imperial expansion intothe Caucasus and colonization ofChechnyaa subject as topicaltoday as in Tolstoy's time. But thework transcends social commentaryto become a supreme artisticmeditation on the eternal humanstruggle between the forces ofgoodand those ofviolence. Hadji Murddstirs readers through powerfulunderstatement, lifelike description,and by arousing sympathy for theChechen freedom-fighter, HadjiMurad, whose innate goodness andpersonal heroism are juxtaposed

    against the spiritual bankruptcy ofRussian imperial society. The entirework beautifully synthesizes Tolstoysbelief in the superiority of untutorednature over social artificea majortheme of the early novel TheCossacks (1863), The SevastopolStories (1855-56), and the shortstory "Three Deaths" (1858).Like everything else Tolstoy wrote,Hadji Murdd reveals the writer'sprofound faith in the human spiritand his unwavering commitment tothe hero he cherished above all:Truth.

    "The hero of my tale,whom I love with allthe power of my soul,whom I have tried toportray in all itsbeauty,who hasbeen, is, and will bebeautiful, is Truth."

    LEO TOLSTOYfrom his 1855 short story"Sevastopol in May"

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    Discussion Questions

    Why might Tolstoy begin TheDeath ofIvan Ilyich with thefuneral of the main character?How would the effect differ ifit were told chronologically?What are the comic elementsto the opening chapter, andhow do they function?What is your initial impressionof Ivan's wife? Does youropinion of her change as thestory progresses?

    Chapter Two begins with animportant claim: "Ivan Ilyich'slife had been most simple andcommonplaceand mosthorrifying." Why mightTolstoy consider Ivan's "simpleand commonplace" to be"horrifying"?

    As Ivan rises in his career, hefails in his personal life. Whatmight Tolstoy be suggestinghere? Why does Ivan find somuch pleasure in playingbridge?

    Why does Ivan marryPraskovya Fedorovna? Whydoes their marriage deteriorate?Does either husband or wifereceive your sympathy?

    7. Why do you think Ivan iscomforted by the presenceof the peasant boy, Gerasim?How does his attitude contrastwith Ivan's other visitors,especially the doctors?

    8. Compare the conduct of Ivan'sdaughter with Ivan's son. Whyis this 13-year-old boy crucialto the novella's final chapter?

    9. After three days of excruciatingphysical and mental pain, Ivanrealizes that despite a futile life,he can still make amends. Is heright? Does he accomplishthis?

    10. How do you interpret the lightthat Ivan sees at the very end?What might this lightsymbolize or suggest?

    1 1 . Writer Cynthia Ozick says,"This novella is about learning,finally, that you have beenliving a lie, that you've failed tobe true to yourself, that you'vefailed to be true to othersaround you, and that youfailed. And it is aboutexploring the rupture of thelie." Do you agree? Why orwhy not?

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    W*:

    Tolstoys Family HomeaWithout myYasnaya Polyana,

    it is difficult for me to imagineRussia and my relationship to her."LEO TOLSTOY

    '-*?**"-

    l 8I IT iiII II II "I IIii

    I

    .

    Can it be that there is not room forall men on this beautiful earth underthose immeasurable starry heavens?... All that is unkind in the hearts ofmen should, one would think, vanish atcontact with Naturethat mostdirect expression of beauty andgoodness."LEO TOLSTOY

    from his 1853 short story "The Raid"

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    Additional Resources

    Selected ^X/brks by Leo Tolstoy Web sitesThe Sevastopol Stories (1855-56)WarandPeace (1863-69)The Cossacks (1863)Anna Karenina (1873-77)The Kreutzer Sonata (1891)Resurrection (1899)HadjiMurdd (1904)

    Works by Tolstoy PosthumouslyCollectedA Confession and Other Religious

    Writings (Penguin, 1987)Childhood, Boyhood, Youth (ModernLibrary, 2002)

    What Is Art? (Penguin, 1 995)

    Resources about Tolstoy andRussian HistoryBillington, James H. The Icon andthe Axe: An Interpretive History ofRussian Culture. 1966. New York:Vintage, 1970. . The Face ofRussia. New York:TV Books, 1998.Troyat, Henri. Tolstoy. 1965. Tr.from the French by NancyAmphoux. New York: Doubleday,1967.

    Wilson, A.N. Tolstoy: A Biography.New York: Norton, 1988.

    Leo Tolstoy Museum-EstateThe Museum site for Tolstoys home,Yasnaya Polyanalutuw. russianmuseums.info/M531#webThe Russian State LibraryImages and biographical informationabout Leo Tolstoy. To read it in English:http:lltolstoy-nasledie. ruRlang=en

    Tolstoy in hispeasant clothingduring his lateryears.

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    NATIONALENDOWMENTFOR THE ARTS

    _ . INSTITUTE ol ..Museum, .librarySERVICES

    AHIDWEST

    The National Endowment for the Arts is a public agency dedicated to supportingexcellence in the artsboth new and establishedbringing the arts to allAmericans, and providing leadership in arts education. Established by Congress in1965 as an independent agency of the federal government, the Endowment is thenations largest annual hinder of the arts, bringing great art to all 50 states,including rural areas, inner cities, and military bases.

    The Institute ofMuseum and Library Services is the primary source of federalsupport for the nations 122,000 libraries and 17,500 museums. The Institutesmission is to create strong libraries and museums that connect people toinformation and ideas. The Institute works at the national level and incoordination with state and local organizations to sustain heritage, culture, andknowledge; enhance learning and innovation; and support professionaldevelopment.

    Arts Midwest connects people throughout the Midwest and the world tomeaningful arts opportunities, sharing creativity, knowledge, and understandingacross boundaries. One of six non-profit regional arts organizations in the UnitedStates, Arts Midwest's history spans more than 25 years.Additional support for the Big Read has also been provided by theWK. Kellogg Foundation.

    Works CitedKatz, Michael R., ed. Tolstoy's Short Fiction: Norton Critical edition. New York: Norton, 1990.Solzhenitsyn, Alexander. The First Circle. Tr. Thomas P Whitney. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Fress, 1968.Tolstoy, Leo. A Confession. 1880. New York Eenguin, 1987. . The Jubilee edition of the Complete Collected Works ofL. N. Tolstoy in 90 volumes, Vol. 5. Fublished in Moscow bythe Russian Academy of Sciences. . The Death ofIvan Ilyich. 1886. Tr. Lynn SolotarofF. New York: Bantam Books, 1981. . The Raid and Other Stories. Tr. Louise and Aylmer Maude. London: Oxford University Fress, 1982. . War andPeace. Norton Critical edition, 2nd ed. Trans, and Ed. George Gibian. New York Norton, 1996.AcknowledgmentsDavid Kipen, NEA Director of Literature, National Reading InitiativesWriters: Andrew D. Kaufman, Lecturer and Visiting Scholar at the University of Virginia, and Erika Koss for the

    National Endowment for the Arts, with a preface by Dana GioiaSeries Editor: Erika Koss for the National Endowment for the ArtsImage Editor: Molly Thomas-Hicks with Dan Brady for the National Endowment for the ArtsGraphic Design: Fletcher Design/Washington, DCImage CreditsCover Portrait John Sherffius for the Big Read. Inside Front Cover: Bettmann/Corbis. Page 1: Caricature ofDana Gioia by JohnSherffius. Pages 2-3: Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress; book cover courtesy ofRandom House, Inc. Page 4: Photo courtesy ofthe Russian State Library. Page 5: Photo by SA Tolstaia, courtesy of the Russian State Library. Page 6: Photo by V.G. Chertkov, courtesyof the Russian State Library. Page 7: Courtesy of the Library of Congress. Page 8: Both images, courtesy of the Library of Congress. Page11: Bettmann/Corbis. Page 1 2: Book covers for The Kingdom ofGod Is Within You, Hadji Murdd, and Anna Karenina courtesy ofBarnes & Noble, Inc.; book cover for War andPeace courtesy ofPenguin Group (USA), Inc.; book cover for Resurrection courtesy ofDover Publications. Page 15: Both photos, courtesy ofAndrew D. Kaufman. Page 16: Bettman/Corbis.

    This publication is published by:National Endowment for the Arts 1 100 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20506-0001(202) 682-5400 www.nea.gov

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    NATIONALENDOWMENTFOR THE ARTS

    Ivan llyich's life hadbeen most simple andcommonplaceandmost horrifying."LEO TOLSTOYfrom The Death ofIvan Ilyich

    The Big Read is an initiative ofthe NationalEndowmentfor the Arts designed to restore readingto the center ofAmerican culture. The NEA presentsThe Big Read in partnership with the Institute ofMuseum and Library Services and in cooperationwith Arts Midwest.

    & ..INSTITUTE .. Museum.ndLbrary.'. SERVICES

    A great nation deserves great art.


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