THE TROUBLE WITH TOLSTOY

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  • Опубліковано 20 гру 2024

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  • @aristotle4048
    @aristotle4048 7 років тому +72

    Anna Karenina is his best work and one of the greatest, if not the greatest novel of the 19th century, who agrees?

    • @aristotle4048
      @aristotle4048 7 років тому +5

      It's my own opinion to be honest.

    • @czesarjoshuaobligado9818
      @czesarjoshuaobligado9818 7 років тому +9

      ARISTOTLE I share this sentiment. Although War and Peace is epic in scale, Anna Karenina is more sincere and epiphanic.

    • @czesarjoshuaobligado9818
      @czesarjoshuaobligado9818 7 років тому +8

      ARISTOTLE Les Miserables is for me, the greatest 19th century novel. Anna Karenina is the greatest novel EVER written

    • @jacksonvalad8012
      @jacksonvalad8012 6 років тому +1

      I ADORE Anna Karenina

    • @kostyalevin8880
      @kostyalevin8880 6 років тому

      ARISTOTLE more like greatest novel everrr

  • @kennethfordjr4214
    @kennethfordjr4214 Рік тому +1

    The presenter is extraordinary!!!!

  • @theradioattheendoftheworld4251
    @theradioattheendoftheworld4251 3 роки тому +3

    Tolstoy and Dostoevsky made a huge impression on me when I was a young man and I still read them regularly.

  • @hannahxin3800
    @hannahxin3800 3 роки тому +2

    "War and Peace" is the greatest novel I have ever read. before read war and peace. I love "Dream of the Red Chamber" the most. Now War and Peace become No.1 in my mind. What a Greatest Tolstoy. admire him...... he is the greatest hero in the world. the hero never dies......Forever Tolstoy.

  • @antoniolau8762
    @antoniolau8762 4 роки тому +3

    Quite simply the greatest author of all time. His unique ability to paint the everyday with just the right choice and arrangement of words

  • @streb6
    @streb6 4 роки тому +3

    Beauty of Leo is his everlasting "young" unaltered perception of everything, every moment , feeling , emotion and beyond in all vivid colours of imagination , yours and mine where that his reality, depiction meets and melt in our hearts, minds but leaves a solid adorable impression akin to universal humanity if there is something of that sort one could describe it. We fall in love of our existence , its troubles and tribulations unwittingly or perhaps being one with. Thank you Larry , thank you very much 💪🖒

  • @personalexperience3637
    @personalexperience3637 4 роки тому +18

    In the time of covid-19- I am reading Anna Karenina 800 plus pages - epic -now into the 2nd part & I never want this novel to end...with Monet I see the locomotive, now I feel the tremors & the dangers. Feel for Dolly: the truth of Anna's words regarding Oblonsky's betrayal(s)...

  • @felixxxrytp4230
    @felixxxrytp4230 4 роки тому +6

    as for me as Russian it was exciting and warming-heart documentary! Thank you for being interested in our culture! I hope someday there wouldn't be so much hate and misunderstanding to Russia and its livers, buy only interest and respectation. Keep on doing your job, you are absolutely adorable!!!

    • @ShekharSircar
      @ShekharSircar 4 роки тому +1

      I am an Indian and have grown up reading Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy and Chekov. Hope to visit Russia one day. There is nothing like Russian literature in the world.

  • @b.c.7741
    @b.c.7741 7 років тому +16

    Great documentary. I love Anna Karenina. I will read it again and again as well as I will War and Peace. Also, i don't believe I will ever escape the feeling and mood that i was left with when reading Resurrection. I love his spiritual writings most of all..
    Although I do wish they would make a documentary like this for Dostoyevsky!

  • @janethayes5941
    @janethayes5941 4 роки тому +1

    This is just fascinating! I never read Tolstoy but I sure am now. Thanks!

  • @kennethfordjr4214
    @kennethfordjr4214 Рік тому

    I love this show ❤!!!

  • @Mr.E.Shoppa
    @Mr.E.Shoppa 7 років тому +7

    Wow, thank you for this excellent documentary!

  • @raysierra4279
    @raysierra4279 4 роки тому +10

    Tolstoy idolized Charles Dickens.he said Dickens was the greatest writer of the century.he had a picture of Dickens on his wall.he said all Dickens characters were personal friends of his..... Tolstoy knew writing.he was most impressed by Dickens.....

  • @DUFMAN123
    @DUFMAN123 4 роки тому +5

    I love his work, and have recently read some of his shorter novels mentioned here including The Cossacks, Sketches of Sevastopol and Hadji Murat. The latter in particular I believe to be some of his very best work and a must read for anyone who might otherwise have stopped after War and Peace and Anna Karenina.

  • @tamtaghvitidze4735
    @tamtaghvitidze4735 7 років тому +8

    Definitely the best Author ever!

    • @ASAPJermz
      @ASAPJermz 5 років тому +1

      No. Top 10 but not the best. Dostoevsky is a far superior, complex novelist than Tolstoy.

    • @icmull
      @icmull 4 роки тому

      Complexity does not make you better. Not saying Dostoevsky isn't top 10, Id say he is. I find Tolstoy and Dumas more gripping, Nabokovs prose is insane, Dickens plots and characters are more interesting. So it depends on where you are in life when you read these novels and what your comparing.

  • @shadowking1380
    @shadowking1380 5 років тому +5

    Never read a word of his but heard of his reputation and the biography is fascinating

  • @michaelscribe4827
    @michaelscribe4827 6 років тому +5

    Can you imagine anyone taking on everyone today? Tolstoy saw through everything humans do, but still remained compassionate. It wasn't for nothing that www.philipglass.com named the first act of his 1979 Gandhi opera "Satyagraha " Tolstoy

  • @Allonenotalone
    @Allonenotalone Рік тому

    He loves the truth. He changed my life.

  • @adnanshahriar4435
    @adnanshahriar4435 3 роки тому +2

    UPLOAD THE PART 2 AGAIN PLEASE

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  5 років тому +4

    A spiritual rationalist who dispensed with magical spells

  • @shivasiva9392
    @shivasiva9392 Рік тому

    Tolystoy stories made me cry

  • @alijaved3964
    @alijaved3964 5 років тому +1

    Great man ,,,thanks from pakistan

  • @nthperson
    @nthperson 5 років тому +2

    Not well known is Tolstoy's deep commitment to the reform proposals contained in the writings of the American political economist Henry George. The two never met but corresponded, and George's son visited Tolstoy early in the 20th century. As director of the online education and research project, the School of Cooperative Individualism, I have compiled many of Tolstoy's writings on his philosophy of social improvement. Here is a link to the author's page that contains Tolstoy's writings:
    www.cooperative-individualism.org/authors_t.htm
    Edward J. Dodson, M.L.A.

  • @2Hot2
    @2Hot2 7 років тому +29

    Great documentary but it's not fair to say that it was "brutal" of Tolstoy to show his fiancée his diaries before the wedding. On the contrary, it was a noble (if misguided) gesture: he wanted to make sure that she could love him as he really was and give her the chance to back out of the marriage otherwise, which I'm sure would have absolutely crushed him. That said, I have a friend who decided to confess his love affairs to his wife and start afresh, and it ended in divorce. She told me that what bothered her so much was not his infidelities but "why did he have to tell me about it!"

    • @badlaamaurukehu
      @badlaamaurukehu 4 роки тому

      Temporal acticity noted.

    • @dl-q3387
      @dl-q3387 4 роки тому

      Badlaama Urukehu lol just stop

    • @IsabellePETIET
      @IsabellePETIET 4 роки тому

      It was more than brutal: it was crual.

    • @2Hot2
      @2Hot2 4 роки тому

      @@IsabellePETIET "Crual" = a contraction of "cruel" and "unusual" punishment?

    • @jimmyrimshot1108
      @jimmyrimshot1108 4 роки тому

      In my most humble of opinions, one of the few beneficial acts available to a practicing Catholic is confession, where, as the confessor rightly expects, his revelations remain in confidence between him and the priest. Confession allows the individual to unburden himself from sin, and more importantly shame. Bearing that in mind, your confession is conducted behind closed doors and ends with whatever penance is given for the forgiveness of your sins. However as in the alternative type of confession Tolstoy chose, it may well have left him feeling wonderful, one must doubt his love feeling quite the same. Sincerely James

  • @ciceroaraujo2552
    @ciceroaraujo2552 7 років тому +2

    Great work Mr Larry

  • @RemedyUnderTheSun
    @RemedyUnderTheSun 4 роки тому +2

    I think maybe he gave her the diaries before the marriage so she would know who he really was, who he was in his past. It might not be as dark as people think, maybe he did it so she would know truly who she was marrying. Maybe it weighed on his conscience to do that, he probably would have felt guilt if she did not know. A man is often guilty of his past for most of his life.

  • @shivainvalidos6873
    @shivainvalidos6873 7 років тому

    Thank you for posting this!

  • @SyntheticLTD
    @SyntheticLTD 8 років тому +2

    war... madness?? THIS! IS! SPARTA!!

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  7 років тому +2

    Glad you appreciate!

  • @czesarjoshuaobligado9818
    @czesarjoshuaobligado9818 7 років тому +12

    Anna Karenina, in my opinion, is way grander than War and Peace in terms of depth and moral.

    • @larrysdesk
      @larrysdesk  7 років тому +11

      A K is more accessible and lucid for the average reader. Largely autobiographical its concepts were more accessible for Tolstoy himself. In W & P he had to project himself to a greater degree into .other personalities which he modelled on people he knew, but not on the same terms as in A K. The marvel in this novel is his portrayal of a female sensibility

    • @icmull
      @icmull 4 роки тому

      @@larrysdesk Yeah, W&P is better. I don't think it is less accessible though. Its only slightly longer and is very exciting and I found it hard to put down. Even the hunting scene is crazy good and exciting.

  • @owl6218
    @owl6218 6 років тому +2

    Notes from Sevestapol, peerless. Also, The Cossacks, and Haji Murad. Tolstoy is the master of the narrative form. As for novels, I prefer Dostoyevsky. What Tolstoy does with narrative that draws upon his personel experience with war, Dostoyevsky does with novels, also drawing upon his personal experience of psychological suffering, acceptance of suffering, salvation and release from it .

    • @bryanakcasu
      @bryanakcasu 2 роки тому

      both are essential in my opinion

  • @zoonpolitikon89
    @zoonpolitikon89 6 років тому +2

    Song from 2:55?❤

  • @nigelmcclatchey4490
    @nigelmcclatchey4490 3 роки тому

    Magnificent! But where is Part 2?

  • @grimekitty3381
    @grimekitty3381 3 роки тому +1

    Can someone please tell me what the railway worker said?

  • @hopewelliana
    @hopewelliana 7 років тому +1

    where is part 2?...love it ...thank you

    • @larrysdesk
      @larrysdesk  7 років тому +1

      It's there, but if you have trouble, try this: www.larrysdesk.com/videos.html

    • @edward9862
      @edward9862 3 роки тому

      Blocked due to copywrite infringement?

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  7 років тому +3

    There is more detail of this event in some of his biographies

  • @yohei72
    @yohei72 3 роки тому

    Fascinating, thanks for posting. Isn't there a second half somewhere? Can't find any sign of it on UA-cam.

  • @moshefabrikant1
    @moshefabrikant1 2 роки тому

    9:30
    מהי החשיבות של אהבה אצל טולסטוי?

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  4 роки тому

    He also visited him on his European tour!

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  6 років тому +1

    Matter of opinion, apples and oranges . . .

  • @craigpsimpson
    @craigpsimpson 7 років тому +1

    What is the music during the montage at the start?

  • @bookaufman9643
    @bookaufman9643 3 місяці тому

    Great Rider but sometimes there's just so many characters. The problem lies with me not with the writing but it is hard for me to keep track of all of it. I don't like to go back and reread things.

  • @1siddynickhead
    @1siddynickhead 3 роки тому

    What is the book the host is reading from?

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  3 роки тому

    Copyright problems, removed.

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  5 років тому

    Begin by reading some short stories: There are Tolstoy books available here: www.doukhoborstore.com/books.html

  • @brandondarrin1408
    @brandondarrin1408 7 років тому +1

    I too found that green stick that was buried.

    • @chinojarjos
      @chinojarjos 5 років тому

      Brandon Darrin you found it then?

  • @EMDEEW
    @EMDEEW 3 роки тому

    Where is part two?

  • @money5434
    @money5434 3 роки тому

    Leo Tolstoy hated the institutionalised form of education; guess what: Albert Einstein had the same thing to say about it. And it is definitely true that they from it.

  • @themerryprankster44
    @themerryprankster44 4 роки тому

    Is the narrator reading from a single volume of Tolstoy's diaries? Anyone know what the specific title would be?

  • @joedelilo5608
    @joedelilo5608 7 років тому

    do James Patterson next!

  • @zebereketzebereket3832
    @zebereketzebereket3832 2 роки тому

    it is interesting

  • @jamesanonymous2343
    @jamesanonymous2343 5 років тому

    read his bio years ago,,,,don't remember a single word of it.

  • @susettesantiago5509
    @susettesantiago5509 2 роки тому

    Who are the they in the theatre of war………………..

  • @sohrabtajadin3402
    @sohrabtajadin3402 Рік тому

    BRILLIANT BUT " HADJI MURAT" IS NOT MENTIONED WHICH IS THE BEST SHORT NOVELLA EVER WRITTEN (ACCORDING TO HAROLD BLOOM)

  • @IsabellePETIET
    @IsabellePETIET 4 роки тому +1

    Le plus grand écrivain de tous les temps mais un mari abominable.

  • @irenetull4269
    @irenetull4269 6 років тому +1

    I think Leo Tolstoy was a manic - depressive.

  • @nietzschesno-things523
    @nietzschesno-things523 4 роки тому

    ua-cam.com/video/erP_iVnQiC0/v-deo.html here's part two for anyone else having trouble finding it

  • @cristinawilligs
    @cristinawilligs 6 років тому +1

    the grand grand son looks like putin

    • @icmull
      @icmull 4 роки тому

      He is.

  • @yurkellis
    @yurkellis 5 років тому +3

    Ok, there are 52 of us commenting here.. Lady Gaga is much more popular.

  • @casteretpollux
    @casteretpollux 2 місяці тому

    Yeah - "poochin" and the " Rooshans" don't understand Tolstoy. We need the Brits to explain. I commence viewing with interest.

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  6 років тому

    We have often thought so ~

  • @cristinawilligs
    @cristinawilligs 6 років тому

    being an orphan must be thought, but it was not uncommon on 19 century

  • @spurdospoerde416
    @spurdospoerde416 7 років тому +2

    I think there were no attack helicopters during Tolstoy's time.

    • @amaxamon
      @amaxamon 7 років тому +2

      There were. Look it up!

  • @larrysdesk
    @larrysdesk  7 років тому +4

    Your imagination falls a bit short of Tolstoy's

    • @vladimirmylnikov8259
      @vladimirmylnikov8259 5 років тому

      By the way, the novel should be translated as Anna Karenin. (no a at the end) Cheers.

    • @kolya727
      @kolya727 4 роки тому +1

      @@vladimirmylnikov8259 You're wrong. Cheers.

    • @vladimirmylnikov8259
      @vladimirmylnikov8259 4 роки тому

      @@kolya727 If you think that I am wrong then it shows that you might not understand the novel.

    • @kolya727
      @kolya727 4 роки тому +1

      @@vladimirmylnikov8259 I know you are wrong, but I have no idea if you are an honest moron or if you are simply pretending.

    • @vladimirmylnikov8259
      @vladimirmylnikov8259 4 роки тому

      @@kolya727 Well, it is very true that you have no idea what you are talking about. Are you bilingual by any chance? The point is - Anna is married to a man whose name is Karenin. She becomes Anna Karenin. Read V.Nabokov on this matter if you don't
      believe me. In Russian she is Анна Каренина, but in English she is Anna Karenin.

  • @felixrian4741
    @felixrian4741 6 років тому +1

    Really?

    • @felixrian4741
      @felixrian4741 6 років тому

      ua-cam.com/video/TPxwBHoxHI8/v-deo.html

  • @533nicky
    @533nicky 3 роки тому

    Quite simply the greatest author of all time. His unique ability to paint the everyday with just the right choice and arrangement of words