Main
Search This Site

« back to Reading By Example
» forward to Doctor Zhivago

Discussion Archives
Bel Canto
blindness
A Box of Matches
Bridge of Birds

a canticle for leibowitz
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Chronicle of a Death Foretold
A Confederacy of Dunces
confessions of an ugly stepsister
Coraline
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

descent into hell
The Dew Breaker
The Diamond Age
Doctor Zhivago
don quixote

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Fight Club
The Five People You Meet in Heaven
Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe

The Ghost Writer
good in bed

harry potter and the sorcerer's stone
A Home at the End of the World
House of Leaves

If on a Winter's Night a Traveler
invisible monsters

The Kite Runner

Life of Pi

memoirs of a geisha
Middlesex
Motherless Brooklyn
mysterious skin

Neverwhere
noir
Norwegian Wood

One for the Money

the poisonwood bible

revenge
Running with Scissors

The Secret Life of Bees
shopgirl
The Solitaire Mystery
The Stupidest Angel

Things Fall Apart
Thumbsucker
The Time Traveler's Wife
Troll

Veronika Decides to Die

The Wasp Factory
Watch Your Mouth
What is the What
A Wrinkle in Time
Wuthering Heights

 

December 18, 2006

An Introduction to Boris Pasternak

Eddie will be here this evening to start December's discussion of Doctor Zhivago. In the meantime, I've gathered some background information on Boris Pasternak as an introduction.

Wikipedia: "Doctor Zhivago (novel)"

Although Wikipedia is notoriously bad at qualitative content, it's generally the first place you're led when doing an Internet search for information. The article contains very little regarding Pasternak and the novel itself, but it makes up for it in coverage of film, television, and theatrical adaptations.

Regarding article info about the novel, I zeroed in on the following sentence: "Yuri must witness cannibalism, dismemberment, and other horrors suffered by the innocent civilian population during the turmoil." There were horrors, yes, but I'm pretty sure cannibalism was mentioned in only one sentence and the dismemberment took place in one scene of one chapter. And Dr. Z didn't actually witness either; he saw the aftermath.

Coincidentally, Doctor Zhivago was Wikipedia's novel project for November-December 2006. It received only five edits, mainly improving punctuation and sentence construction. If you're a Wikipedia contributor and have read this book, you might want to help the article out.

TIME magazine: "Blood Relatives"

From 1982, this is a review of The Correspondence of Boris Pasternak and Olga Freidenberg 1910-1954. Although not wholly about Doctor Zhivago, the review mentions some revealing quotes from Pasternak about the novel. "It is my first real work. In it I want to convey the historical image of Russia over the past 45 years, and at the same time I want to express in every aspect of the story—a sad, dismal story, worked out in fine detail, ideally, as in a Dickens or Dostoyevsky novel—my own views on art, the Gospels, the life of man in history, and much more."

NPR: "Pasternak's Funeral: A Poetic Protest"

Weekend Edition aired this story about Pasternak on November 5, 2006. Hundreds of mourners attended his funeral in 1960 despite objections of the Soviet government. The broadcast includes reactions from Russians to Pasternak's work and a recording of his voice from a poetry reading. "He became a symbol of one man's defense of freedom of expression."

Academy of American Poets: "Boris Pasternak"

Although the Academy's mission is to support American poets, their web presence, poets.org, contains excellent biographical information on poets from everywhere. This concise but comprehensive retelling of Pasternak's life story reveals many of the autobiographical events that inspired Doctor Zhivago. If you're interested in reading some of Pasternak's poems, a bilingual collection can be found at Friends & Partners.



 

Advertisements
 
 
Author:
Title:

Keyword:
Additional Features:
 First Edition
 Signed
 Dust Jacket
 Any Binding
 Hard Cover
 Soft Cover