Sujet : Re: WAR AND PEACE by Tolstoy
De : g (at) *nospam* crcomp.net (Don)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.writtenDate : 01. Feb 2025, 18:32:30
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <20250201b@crcomp.net>
References : 1 2 3
Paul S Person wrote:
D wrote:
Don wrote:
>
It's not really Science Fiction, but it's been mentioned lately.
>
The parts pertaining to peaceful romance appeal to me much more than
the warfare. Ironically, Tolstoy's tome helps me cope with armed
>
Too long and boring for me. I prefer Dostoyesky any day of the week. Crime and
punishment is excellent! Borther Karamazov also good. The idiot I found so-so.
>
I enjoy Bondarchuck's /War and Peace/ every time I see it. I just wish
it were complete. The novel was not memorable.
>
/The Idiot/ was interesting, but ultimately pointless. If an actual
idiot had been involved, that might have helped.
>
I've experienced /Crime and Punishment/ both in novel and Classics
Illustrated form. Somewhere, probably in a class, I was fed the
factoid that the protagonist turns himself in because the detective
wears him down. Imagine my surprise when I last read it to realize the
true reason.
>
/The Brothers Karamazov/ was read as part of the collection called The
Great Books of the Western World. I didn't much like it. Perhaps if he
had finished the projected follow-ups it would have made more sense.
The /only/ character I had any concern about (any empathy with) was a
small boy who dies. None of the brothers was worth reading about,
IMHO.
>
I also read other Dostoyevsky novels, notably /The Devils/ which, like
/The Secret Agent/ (which Hitchcock filmed under the title /Saboteur/,
having used /The Secret Agent/ for a completely different spy story
earlier), is about The Revolution. One thing I noticed in a few of
them were references to Jesuits trying to convert Orthodox believers
to Roman Catholicism. This makes me wonder if the famous
"anti-Christian" essay in /The Brothers Karamazov/ is not actually an
"anti-Roman-Catholicism" essay, since it is clearly about a Roman
Catholic institution. But I have no idea if this is the case or not.
It's a shame you can't call to mind the Catholic intrigues in WAR AND
PEACE by Tolstoy. It sort of foreshadows the creation of the Catholic
Intelligence Agency (CIA) a century and change later.
Tolstoy also talks about Freemasonry for a few chapters. Here's
his impression:
Finally, to the fourth category also a great many [Freemason]
Brothers belonged, particularly those who had lately joined.
These according to Pierre’s observations were men who had no
belief in anything, nor desire for anything, but joined the
Freemasons merely to associate with the wealthy young Brothers
who were influential through their connections or rank, and
of whom there were very many in the lodge.
As an aside, after being banned, Freemasonry is reportedly making a
comeback in Syria.
Danke,
-- Don.......My cat's )\._.,--....,'``. https://crcomp.net/reviews.phptelltale tall tail /, _.. \ _\ (`._ ,. Walk humbly with thy God.tells tall tales.. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' Make 1984 fiction again.