Amazon.com Review
Russian writer/moralist
Alexander Solzhenitsyn is not pleased about this biography that draws on interviews with his first wife. Nonetheless, British novelist D. M. Thomas views Solzhenitsyn throughout with sympathy, depicting a difficult but admirable man as important for his role in the struggle against Soviet totalitarianism as for the artistry of his fiction. The final chapters, on Solzhenitsyn's return home in 1994 after 20 years in exile, show "the ultimate dissident" still alone, disdained as old-fashioned and irrelevant in the new Russia. Thomas writes with a lyrical soulfulness that underscores his sense of connection to Russian artists.
From Library Journal
D.M. Thomas (Flying in to Love, LJ 11/1/92) casts a novelist's eye on a giant of 20th-century Russian literature in this first-rate, engrossing biography. This is a carefully researched narrative depicting the life of Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918), a life that parallels the modern history of his country. Thomas describes the many cataclysmic events of Solzhenitsyn's life: his early devotion to communism, his years in the Red Army and labor camp, his battle with cancer, his dissident writings, his exile to the United States in 1974, and his eventual return to Russia 20 years later. There is no dearth of biographical material on Solzhenitsyn?Michael Scammell's authoritative biography Solzhenitsyn (LJ 9/15/84) being the most significant thus far. But with his background in and obvious passion for Russian letters, Thomas does something a historian cannot: he paints a beautifully realized portrait of Solzhenitsyn as if he were a character in one of his own epic novels, a man bound by his rigid idealistic asceticism in a tragic century. This brilliant achievement is highly recommended.?Diane Gardner Premo, Rochester P.L., N.Y.
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