And once more, just like with Notes from the Underground, highly relevant still to modern readers. Generation gaps, the radical certainty of youth giving way to a gradual acceptance of the bourgeois mentality they despised, it's all very sixties.
1860s in fact

It makes sense for Bazarov to die young, I suppose in a way it was a long way coming. More than for him I felt sad for his parents, though - his uneasiness and embarrassment at his mixed feelings for his parents, of love, shame, looking down on them and being ashamed of that too, and his parents' feelings in return, those are all very well done.
I agree. The Bazarov's family is wonderfully drawn. His mother is perhaps the most interesting woman in the book, what with her hastily scribbled Russian-ness. She feels the most fleshed out.
And yes, I kept wanting to slap him and make him give his mother and father a hug.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
Russian Book Club: Fathers and Sons by Turgenev.
- 17/10/2010 01:39:16 AM
1095 Views
Bazarov
- 17/10/2010 02:12:03 PM
920 Views
oh, and
- 17/10/2010 06:42:38 PM
812 Views
Re: oh, and
- 18/10/2010 12:09:10 AM
786 Views
Arkady
- 17/10/2010 02:15:54 PM
769 Views
Well, that makes sense
- 17/10/2010 05:12:09 PM
766 Views
Re: Well, that makes sense
- 18/10/2010 12:04:05 AM
774 Views
See, I liked Arkady
- 17/10/2010 06:08:57 PM
708 Views
Oh...Rebekah, I was going to mention that I saw your post only much later because I was very drunk.
- 17/10/2010 05:13:41 PM
795 Views
Good book.
- 17/10/2010 06:37:16 PM
821 Views
I loved it. Great book.
- 18/10/2010 10:49:27 PM
746 Views
Re: I loved it. Great book.
- 18/10/2010 11:33:42 PM
727 Views
I think it's very relevant. It's also unusually un-Russian.
- 18/10/2010 11:54:03 PM
713 Views
Yeah... the Russian nobility at the time seems to have been kind of un-Russian, really.
- 20/10/2010 04:03:34 PM
797 Views
It felt very Russian to me as well
- 20/10/2010 04:12:50 PM
719 Views
There was little of the usual ... histrionics that happen in Russian novels.
- 22/10/2010 07:02:12 PM
782 Views
I really wish I'd bought a properly annotated version.
- 22/10/2010 07:07:16 PM
821 Views
The answer to that is to just read a great book on Nineteenth Century Russian history.
- 22/10/2010 10:55:06 PM
794 Views
Not just Russian, though, there's a lot of mentions of other European history.
- 22/10/2010 11:19:28 PM
740 Views
Nikolai and Pavel - I love them.
- 22/10/2010 07:14:11 PM
903 Views
Perhaps it's Pavel's "The Chap"-ish nature that makes the novel seem less Russian to me.
- 22/10/2010 10:53:56 PM
866 Views

*NM*