Reflections on the Classics
A Reader's Journey

War and Peace

This section is dedicated to War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy. Through close reading and reflection, we explore its portrayal of war, history, family, and human fate, sharing English reading notes and thoughtful responses to this monumental novel.
We Finally Learned That We Know Nothing-After Reading

We Finally Learned That We Know Nothing Reading Tolstoy's War and Peace

War and Peace is so vast that I have to jot down my thoughts one by one, afraid I’ll lose myself in the labyrinth otherwise. Even then, these notes are just fragments, barely touching the surface of what this book contains. The Russian Who Knows Nothing There’s a passage in the novel that made me laugh out loud in bed at midnight. Tolstoy describes Pfuel as one of those hopelessly self-confident men, unchanging and ready to die for his beliefs—a type that can only be German, because only Germans derive such certainty from abstract ideas like science, from the illusion of possessing perfect truth. The French are self-assured because they believe themselves irresistibly charming to everyone, in both mind and...

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Clean Vessels, Pure Nectar-After Reading

Clean Vessels, Pure Nectar Tolstoy on Wisdom and War

In 1856, the old Tsar Nicholas I ended his life by poison, and Alexander II came to the throne. The reforms of the new reign stirred fresh public interest in the Decembrist Uprising—the failed revolt that had greeted Nicholas I’s accession. Tolstoy, always suspicious of authority and its symbols, disliked this renewed fascination with “digging up old relics.” Turgenev, ten years his senior, scolded him sharply in a letter. That exchange, ironically, awakened Tolstoy’s own curiosity about the period. He began to imagine a novel about the Decembrists returning from exile. Yet he soon discovered that to reveal what those men believed, he would have to return to 1825 and write the uprising itself. And to write 1825, he would...

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