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Original Title: Доктор Живаго
ISBN: 0679774386 (ISBN13: 9780679774389)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Gordon, Zjivago, Gromeko, Markel, Antipov, Guichard, Komarovski, Kologrivov, Tiverzin, Galioellin, Vledjenjapin, Doedorov, Djamina
Setting: Moscow(Russian Federation) Yuriatin(Russian Federation) U.S.S.R. …more Russia …less
Literary Awards: Premio Bancarella (1958)
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Doctor Zhivago Paperback | Pages: 592 pages
Rating: 4.03 | 76064 Users | 2921 Reviews

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This epic tale about the effects of the Russian Revolution and its aftermath on a bourgeois family was not published in the Soviet Union until 1987. One of the results of its publication in the West was Pasternak's complete rejection by Soviet authorities; when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 he was compelled to decline it. The book quickly became an international best-seller.

Dr. Yury Zhivago, Pasternak's alter ego, is a poet, philosopher, and physician whose life is disrupted by the war and by his love for Lara, the wife of a revolutionary. His artistic nature makes him vulnerable to the brutality and harshness of the Bolsheviks. The poems he writes constitute some of the most beautiful writing featured in the novel.

Describe About Books Doctor Zhivago

Title:Doctor Zhivago
Author:Boris Pasternak
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 592 pages
Published:March 18th 1997 by Pantheon (first published November 1957)
Categories:Romance. Paranormal Romance. Paranormal. Vampires. Fantasy

Rating About Books Doctor Zhivago
Ratings: 4.03 From 76064 Users | 2921 Reviews

Rate About Books Doctor Zhivago
A Russian song is like water in a mill pond. It seems stopped and unmoving. But in its depths it constantly flows...By all possible means, by repetitions, by parallelisms, it holds back the course of the graudally developing content...Restraining itself, mastering itself, an anguished force...it is a mad attempt to stop time with words. Here, Pasternak's character was describing a song, but I do believe Pasternak was defining his novel. Or maybe I just want to believe it, for this book is

The 1965 David Lean film with the same title is one of my all time favorite movies and so it was an inevitability that I would one day, finally, read Boris Pasternaks novel masterpiece. Like James Dickey and Robert Penn Warren, this novel written by a poet leaves the reader with an idea of lyric quality. Nowhere is his identification as a poet more realized than at the end, as the books finishes with a section of poetry, though there are passages throughout the book that blend seamlessly into an

When I read this in my early twenties it went straight into my top ten favourite novels. All the ravishing set pieces of snow, the high adventure of the long train journeys through spectacular landscapes and Yuri and Lara as the romantically bound orphans of the storm was irresistible to my romantic young imagination. On top of that, as youd expect from a poet, the novel is alive with memorable piercing images. This was my third time of reading it. I still loved it but it would no longer make my

AUGUST 2 REVIEW: After finishing the book last night, I immediately wrote my review. I always do that because I right away start reading the next book. Also, writing what I learned from the book and what I felt while reading it are easier if the story is still fresh in my mind.However, for almost the whole day, I thought that I missed the whole point of the story. My August 1 Review below definitely was too weak for a beautifully told forbidden love story of Yuri and Lara.While driving from the

I came to this book knowing the story a little bit: the 1965 movie adaptation is one of my mothers favorite films, and I remember being fascinated by the image of Yuri and Lara taking shelter in Varykino, in the abandoned house filled with snow and icicles (I always thought this is what the apocalypse will look like in Canada). I also knew the novel would be much more intricate and tough to follow than the movie had been, with that pesky habit Russians have of using nicknames and patronymics.

There was no way I could ever escape reading Doctor Zhivago. After all, I'm a proud daughter of a literature teacher; this book earned the Nobel Prize for Boris Pasternak; and it has been staring at me from the top of my to-read pile for years with quiet accusation.And so, reader, I finally read it.Doctor Zhivago is an interesting novel. It is very character-centered but is absolutely *not* character-driven. It is an epochal novel focused on the particularly turbulent, violent and uncertain but

I watched the film years ago and loved it; the book is just as good.

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