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Cancer Ward [Hardcover]

aleksandr solzhenitsyn (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (47 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Book Club Edition (BCE/BOMC) edition (1969)
  • ISBN-10: 0370005872
  • ISBN-13: 978-0370005874
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (47 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

47 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (47 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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75 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Sickness of the Soviet Empire, August 9, 2001
By 
miked99 (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cancer Ward (Hardcover)
Reading Solzhenitsyn's "Cancer Ward" without the historical background of the country in which it is set, a casual reader would be shocked to learn this book was banned by the Soviet government for many years. This book would seem to be nothing more than a sad story of life in a poor country's ward for terminally ill cancer patients. But through the interaction and description of the doctors and patients in Solzhenitsyn's brilliant novel, especially the loveable protagonist Kostoglotov, it becomes apparent that the ward is the Soviet system in a microcosm. With that understanding, this becomes one of the most scathing indictments of a totalitarian state written in the 20th Century. Even Orwell's great novels were not as passionately and directly damning of the Evil Empire.

This is a very typical Russian novel in that the setting is very stationary, the plot is slow moving and not well-defined in many parts, but it is also psychologically deep and gives the reader an immensely profound look at the minds and souls of its characters. But what separates this from so many Russian novels, especially those of the 20th century is that it slams the Communist regime while taking a bleak, Dostoevsky-like view of man as well. Kostoglotov's experiences at the end of this book are not as cathartic as those of Dostoevsky or Tolstoy characters, but the hope that he has is clearly the same in that it stems from a source greater than him or any man. This is an emotionally challenging book and the interpretation of the ending is divisive (just read some reviews here to see both opinions), but that just adds to the genius of this book. I believe the ending is phenomenally beautiful and Solzhenitsyn at his best.

This is a classic that is unfairly dismissed by today's modern, Western, intellectual elites, but its historical significance is undeniable. This book along with a few others inspired the anti-Soviet movement in the U.S., its allied countries, and the democratic revolutionaries inside of Russia in their eventually successful quest to destroy the most murderous empire our world has ever seen.

"Two things he liked: a free life and money in his pocket. They were writing from the clinic, 'If you don't come yourself the police will fetch you.' That's the sort of power the clinic had, even over people who hadn't got any cancer whatever."

God bless Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

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29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "A Real Live Place", August 14, 2002
This review is from: Cancer Ward (Paperback)
Those were the words that Dorothy used to describe Oz after waking up in the bosom of her family. The same intense feeling came over me while reading this book, a task that spanned several years, as I often put it aside for other things, always returning, drawn by the power of the author's prose in opening his world to us. The realness of Solzhenitsyn's worlds makes him perhaps the most accessible Russian novelist. As he described the village where Kostoglotov, the protagonist, lived, or in recounting how Ruasov, the villian/fellow victim ruined lives while justifying his actions, a vivid portrait fills the reader's imagination.
The human struggle to find hope and beauty in the most tragic of settings is what this novel evokes so well. Soviet medicine, cancer, a Zek fresh from the Gulag, and in a twilight turned dawn, Solzhenitsyn finds for his semi-autobiographical protagonist happiness, not only in winning victories against a malignant tumor, but in thoughts of perhaps one more summer to live, with nights sleeping under the stars, of three beech trees that stand like ancient guardians of an otherwise empty steppe horizon, a dog that shared his life there, and of a young nurse and spinster doctor, both of whom he hoped at times to love.
The picture one often got (accurately) of the Soviet Union was of greyness, gloom, uniform drabnes, and of a totalitarian police state. This book serves to remind the reader that, despite such circumstances, even desparately sick human being might still seek, and find, happiness in his own, private world. Along with that, Solzhenitsyn never lets us forget the utter corruption of the Soviet state, often in the person of Ruasov, an ailing bureaucrat who has managed to turn personnel management into an exquisite art form, as an instrument of psychological torture, slowly administered.
Of all Solzehenitsyn's works, this is my favorite. The people one encounters are vividly real, and the ending isn't what one would think (or hope), but is fitting, nonetheless.
-Lloyd A. Conway
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book you can read over and over again., March 2, 2005
By 
Becky (Michigan, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cancer Ward (Paperback)
I re-read "Cancer Ward" about every two years and every time I fall in love with the main character--Kostoglotov--all over again. This book tell of the lives of patients and staff in a cancer ward in Russia.

Kostoglotov, the main character, is a man unfairly exiled under Stalin. He is a normal person like you or me who is living a life of perpetual exile. And then he gets cancer and comes to the ward barely clinging to life.

The book chronicles the lives of several people in the Cancer Ward. The book follows the lives of a couple of nurses that Kostoglotov flirts with and the life of a nurse he doesn't flirt with. There is the young student, the government official, and other cancer patients. Each one deals with cancer in their own way.

It is a sad, yet uplifting book about cancer and about Stalin, who really was a big dose of cancer for Russia. More people need to know about how cruel Stalin was. How he exiled people in his purges for no reason other than his own paranoia. Good people like Kostoglotov had their lives stolen from them.

In the end all Kostoglotov wants to do is get out of the cancer ward and back to his friends in his town of perpetual exile. Before he goes home he visits a zoo. I don't want to ruin the ending for you, but every time I read the ending I cry.

Thanks Mr. Solzhenitsyn for exposing Stalin for what he was and giving me the opportunity to read about everyday Russian people.
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First Sentence:
On top of everything, the cancer wing was Number 13. Read the first page
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Pavel Nikolayevich, Ludmila Afanasyevna, Lev Leonidovich, Vera Kornilyevna, Yevgenia Ustinovna, Kapitolina Matveyevna, Nikolai Ivanovich, Elizaveta Anatolyevna, Aunt Styofa, Maxim Petrovich, Nizamutdin Bahramovich, Aleksei Filippovich, Dormidont Tikhonovich, Elena Alexandrovna, Olympiada Vladislavovna, Soviet Union, Supreme Court, Vera Gangart, Supreme Soviet, Civil War, Issyk Kul, Yefrem Podduyev, Aunt Grusha, Central Asia, Comrade Ostapenko
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Dear Amazon, please put more Solzhenitsyn works into Kindle format 0 Feb 7, 2008
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