An edition of Анна Каренина (1876)

Anna Karenina

Bantam classic ed.
  • 4.2 (47 ratings)
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  • 4.2 (47 ratings)
  • 1,089 Want to read
  • 79 Currently reading
  • 100 Have read

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Last edited by ImportBot
February 28, 2023 | History
An edition of Анна Каренина (1876)

Anna Karenina

Bantam classic ed.
  • 4.2 (47 ratings)
  • 1,089 Want to read
  • 79 Currently reading
  • 100 Have read

Anna Karenina is the wife of a prominant Russian government official. She leads a correct but confining upper-middle-class existence. She seems content with her life as a proper companion to her dignified, unaffectionate husband and an adoring mother to her young son, until she meets Count Vronsky, a young officer of the guards. He pursues her and she falls madly in love with him. Her husband refuses to divorce her, so she gives up everything, including her beloved son, to be with Vronsky. After a short time, Vronsky becomes bored and unhappy with their life as social outcasts. He abandons her, returns to the military and is immediately accepted back into society. Anna, a fallen woman, shunned by respectable society, throws herself under a train. A magnificent drama of vengeance, infidelity, and retribution, Anna Karenina portrays the moving story of people whose emotions conflict with the dominant social mores of their time. Sensual, rebellious Anna falls deeply and passionately in love with the handsome Count Vronsky. When she refuses to conduct the discreet affair that her cold, ambitious husband (and Russian high society) would condone, she is doomed. Set against the tragic love of Anna and Vronsky, the plight of the melancholy nobleman Konstantine Levin unfolds. In doubt about the meaning of life, haunted by thoughts of suicide, Levin's struggles echo Tolstoy's own spiritual crisis. But Anna's inner turmoil mirrors the own emotional imprisonment and mental disintegration of a woman who dares to transgress the strictures of a patriarchal world. In Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy brought to perfection the novel of social realism and created a masterpiece that bared the Russian soul.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
873

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Anna Karénina
Anna Karénina
2020, Standard Ebooks
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
2008, London The Folio Society
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1981, Bantam Books, Bantam Classics
in English - Bantam classic ed.
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1968, W.W. Norton & Company Inc.
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1967, Heron Books, London
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1966, Airmont Publishing Company Inc.
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1961, david magarshack
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenin
Anna Karenin
1956
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1950, Random house,inc.
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1948, Doubleday & Company, Inc.
in English
Cover of: Anna Karenina
Anna Karenina
1944-01-01, Nelson Doubleday, Inc.
in English
Cover of: The Harvard Classics

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. [875-876]).

Published in
New York
Copyright Date
1960

Classifications

Library of Congress
PG3366.A6 M38 1981,

The Physical Object

Pagination
xii, 873, [3] p. ;
Number of pages
873

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL24374308M
ISBN 10
0553210343, 0553213466
ISBN 13
9780553210347, 9780553213461
LCCN
60006052
OCLC/WorldCat
9500991

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL267096W
Wikidata
Q147787
BookBrainz
db8dcaf9-eaac-4900-9cb2-301e387f554b
MusicBrainz
c2a47dcc-0ddc-493d-9f55-bc91deb613fb
LibraryThing
2340

Work Description

Described by William Faulkner as the best novel ever written and by Fyodor Dostoevsky as “flawless,” Anna Karenina tells of the doomed love affair between the sensuous and rebellious Anna and the dashing officer, Count Vronsky. Tragedy unfolds as Anna rejects her passionless marriage and thereby exposes herself to the hypocrisies of society. Set against a vast and richly textured canvas of nineteenth-century Russia, the novel's seven major characters create a dynamic imbalance, playing out the contrasts of city and country life and all the variations on love and family happiness.

Excerpts

KARENIN and his wife continued to live under the same roof, to meet every day, and yet to remain entire strangers to each other.
added anonymously.

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