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Image from drandrandr.livejournal.com 04.12.2009, 16:05 5 comments

Second life of great Socialist monument

A sculpture originally created to crown the 37-meter-high Soviet pavilion of the World's Fair in 1937 has recently been restored and returned to its place at the All-Russia Exhibition Center in Moscow.

Photo from http://kremlin.ru 27.05.2009, 20:48 3 comments

Access granted: log on to Russia’s past

The new digital library in St. Petersburg is said to be without comparison in the world. It houses scanned copies of the entire Russian state historical archive.

Tsar Nicholas II with his son Aleksey. Photo by Pierre Gilliard 07.09.2009, 17:00 5 comments

Secret photos of the Romanovs

The last days of the Romanovs… An exhibition of personal photographs taken by the French tutor of the five children of the last Russian Tsar opens in Moscow’s State Historical Museum on Red Square on September 8.

Boris Anisfeld, 1916 08.09.2009, 19:24

Russian emigrant art to be brought to light at home

Continuing the theme of Russian art heritage created outside the country, the exhibition “Russian Americans” unveils the works of Russian artists of the beginning of the 20th Century, created abroad.

19.05.2009, 19:46 2 comments

The time of Faberge

The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts opens the exhibition of the great goldsmith who worked for the Imperial family, Karl Faberge.

Mikhail Gorbachev (photo by  Annie Leibovitz) 28.12.2009, 17:43 3 comments

Gorby’s ad praised

Former president of the USSR Mikhail Gorbachev’s remarkable ad for Louis Vuitton has been named one of the best print ads of the decade by one of the world’s leading advertising trade publications, Adweek.

16.05.2009, 09:07 1 comment

One-of-a-kind Tsarist furniture almost sold

A rare 19th century collection of chairs and sofas from the Russian Imperial Winter palace in St. Petersburg has been discovered at Helsinki’s Bukowski auction.

Photo taken by Vera Uvarova in hospital 01.06.2009, 09:55

Photo op

A 19-year-old Russian girl spent several months in hospital after a bloody car accident which turned her into a promising photographer.

10.07.2009, 15:14 1 comment

Hemingway: A Farewell to the KGB?

Author of “For Whom the Bell Tolls”, Nobel prize-winning American novelist Ernest Hemingway was allegedly on the list of Soviet KGB agents in America back in the 1940s.

AFP Photo / Stephane Danna 14.07.2009, 10:58 1 comment

Discovering the Romanov family

There’s now a royal road to learning about the Russian imperial family through a large-scale exhibition entitled “Moscow: Splendours of the Romanovs”, which has opened at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco.

Take it as a must-read

Published: 07 July, 2009, 16:24

Illustration to “War and Peace" by Yackevich Aleksandr

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TAGS: Art, Russia


There are some novels which are timelessly influential – and a 19th century Russian book is again leading the pack. Leo Tolstoy’s epic “War and Peace” has topped the list of the 100 best books of all time.

Tolstoy’s epic novel, published one hundred and forty years ago – and set in Napoleonic times – charts the impact of the French Emperor's invasion of Russia on five aristocratic families. But no brief summary does it justice – the novel deals with the most profound themes.

When “War and Peace” was first published in the 1868, people weren't even sure what to call it. Tolstoy's sense of life was too big to be captured by any traditional narrative. One critic called him “a giant harnessed to his great subject” – the whole of human life.

The book also became an epic, Oscar-winning Soviet film. Director Sergey Bondarchuk’s 1968 screen version took seven years to make – longer than it took Tolstoy to write its subject. Costing, what was at the time, an astonishing $100 million, it took seven hours to watch.

For one modern Russian novelist, Zakhar Prilepin, it displays the complete canvas of the human condition – everything from the universe to first love, and the lives of both rich and poor.

“War and Peace has everything that concerns people – love, jealousy, passion, war, peace and courage. It helps not only solve the mystery of the Russian nation, but it also helps understand humans placed in various circumstances, balancing between life and death,” Prilepin believes.

The book has been translated into many languages. Tony Briggs has produced one of the many English versions, 1,400 pages in all, and a gargantuan 366 chapters.

“The story of ‘War and Peace’ is how we get it wrong, how complicated and difficult life is. There’s a famous Russian proverb – ‘Living a life is not just crossing a field’ – and one of the things about war and peace is that privileged people have got everything going for them until they find life a difficult, disappointing business,” Briggs says.

Nabokov also in top ten

The must-read list was put together by Newsweek magazine, and took into account such reasons as the influence of the book on history, its intellectual impact and significance in modern times, as well as its popularity among critics and readers.

It was chosen by a rather varied cast – including US libraries and universities, and even American celebrity Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club.

Russian readers have mixed views on whether such lists are of real literary importance. Many believe the general concept of comparing books to be baseless.

However, Tolstoy is not the only Russian author to hit the “top ten” rating – Vladimir Nabokov’s controversial novel “Lolita” came fourth, outdone only by George Orwell's “1984” and James Joyce’s “Ulysses”.

Among other key works on the list are William Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury”, Ralph Ellison’s “Invisible Man”, Virginia Woolf’s “To the Lighthouse” and Dante Alighieri’s “Divine Comedy”.

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07.07.2009, 10:38 1 comment

Author of “Generations of Winter” remembered

The farewell ceremony for one of Russia’s most important writers of the 20th century, Vasily Aksenov, will be held on July 9, three days after the death of the 76-year-old writer.

A Faberge jeweled gold and enamel cigarette case estimated at around $100,000  

08.07.2009, 10:30

Romanov's possessions up for sale

A one-of-a-kind collection of much sought-after objects which belonged to the Romanov royal family will go under the hammer at Sotheby’s in autumn.