Amazon.com Review
Confession is Leo Tolstoy's memoir of midlife spiritual crisis. In 1879, having written
War and Peace and
Anna Karenina, the 51 year-old Tolstoy began to believe that his life was meaningless.
Confession is his account of the limited satisfactions he derived from his aesthetic and intellectual triumphs, and of his first yearnings for real faith. This book marks the turning point in his career as a writer: after 1880 he would write almost exclusively about religious life, especially devotion among the peasantry (in works such as
The Death of Ivan Ilych and
Resurrection). Near the end of
Confession, Tolstoy describes the desolation he felt upon deciding that he could not solve his crisis of faith by taking refuge in the church. "I have no doubt that there is truth in the doctrine," he writes, "but there can also be no doubt that it harbors a lie; and I must find the truth and the lie so I can tell them apart."
Confession does not find the full Truth, but it offers an inspiring example of a man rejecting the lies that cling to unthinking orthodoxy. Its final, exhilarating, heart-rending account of a spiritually awakening dream ranks with the best of Christian mystical writing.
--Michael Joseph Gross
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Leo Tolstoy, a giant of world literature, is the author of many classics, including War and Peace and Anna Karenina. He died in 1910. David Patterson is professor of English at Oklahoma State University and translator of Tolstoy's The Forged Coupon, also available in Norton paperback.
--This text refers to the
Audio CD
edition.