Friday, February 11, 2011

Hallmark Forgiveness Poems

Review: Fathers and Sons by Turgenev

Seergevic Ivan Turgenev was a Russian writer of 800, a contemporary of Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, and certainly less well known.

I happen to know it through a DVD of a beautiful necklace and I am following with interest the Republic: "The Literary Cafe" precisely what we talked about Dostoevsky.

So I bought the book and reading it I discovered an absolute masterpiece.

The novel Fathers and Sons tells the story of two young students and their return home.

This allows us to know the company by mid-nineteenth century Russian countryside with its own strengths and limitations.

With a smooth and pleasant writing Turgenev describes the characters of the characters and allows us to understand desires, ambitions and limitations, without approaching the 'author gives reviews the legitimate pressures for renewal of their children and to the innate defense of the conservative fathers.

It allows us to understand the company, fear and resistance to change and how people change imperceptibly right to proceed whether we like it or not.

This novel and then all the 'work of Turgenev found stark contrast to the era Turgenev thinned so much that his literary work.

It strikes me that. Because the book is absolutely quiet and nothing scandalous, but probably his analysis of Russian society to the center point and gave trouble, even and especially in those who sought to reform it.

fact, there are several problems but the company denied them and wanted to remain stubbornly attached to the privileges and customs, and absolutely unwilling to see signs and hear the creaking of a world that was ending.

pondered how in this novel can be found obvious similarities in due differences between the European society of late nineteenth century and our time.

all know what happened then in the early 1900's, I sincerely hope that the 'epilogue is not the same.

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