Fiction
Related: About this forumA Year of War and Peace 2017
So, who saw this all the way through, besides me? Sad that some original participants no longer seem to be here. Tis the nature of the beast, I suppose. They come, they go. But, I do miss you guys.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/11939270
Anyway, I enjoyed doing this. I managed to only miss a couple of days which I caught up with the following day. Mostly I learned a lot about stoicism, which I have found quite comforting in these troubled times. The writer, Brian Denton, ended each discussion with a quote from Epictetus or occasionally Marcus Aurelius or Seneca. I copied and pasted several, like this:
This is the chief thing: Do not be perturbed, for all things are according to the nature of the universal; and in a little time you will be nobody and nowhere, like Hadrian and Augustus.
Marcus Aurelius, Meditations
Denton's final summation:
"What Tolstoy is saying is that we must abandon old ways of thinking if those ways of thinking no longer stand to reason. And isnt that what weve been working on this year? Hasnt our project been a project of self-improvement by means of literary and philosophical reflection on the lives of Tolstoys characters? Havent we thought about new ways to address the vicissitudes of life and perhaps avoid the many existential pitfalls those characters fell into? Thats been the idea anyway. I hope its helped." (It has.)
Denton says he plans to do this with another book. I am looking forward to it and will let you know what it is, if I can find it. Medium is kind of hard to figure out sometimes..
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,170 posts)Came across it on my own. Not a fan of Russian literature. I didn't keep up daily, but finished in the year. Was not a fan of the epilogues. Done with Russian literature for a while. Glad I read it though.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)I thought it was a great way to get through a major piece of literature. I had to read W&P back in high school and hated much of it. So I did not reread it, just read what Brian wrote every day. I was able to recall the basics of the tale. I am glad I did it because there is much to be gained, except from the epilogues which do nothing to benefit the book as far as I can tell.
Before you abandon Russian lit altogether you might want to consider this:
Amor Towles' A Gentleman In Moscow, an epic writ small, a story of Tolstoyan scope on a minute scale. Here we see a country in repeated upheaval over the course of decadesfrom the end of Imperial Russia in the Bolshevik Revolution past the rise of the USSR, a period that includes the defeat of one of historys greatest evils by a country that becomes anotherand we see it all from one mans limited viewpoint. ...
It's quite enjoyable and a heck of a lot easier to read than W&P but having done so makes it more interesting, I think. YMMV, of course.
sagesnow
(2,871 posts)It is one I've read twice and will read again. Towles is a master story teller.
sagesnow
(2,871 posts)I'm in a book club already but will have to make time for this War and Peace challenge.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)daily reading is over now. Now we are waiting to see what book he will do this year. Denton says he plans to publish an ebook of all the daily War and Peace posts.
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,170 posts)I just let other things make me get behind and then I'd have to make up several weeks. It's probably 10 minutes a day to keep up.