He spent approximately 1,000 days on the front lines, roughly three of the four years of the conflict between the Germans and Soviets. Vasily Grossman, a Ukrainian Jew, was rejected for military service in 1941 and became a correspondent for the Soviet military paper Krasnaya Zvezda. In 2021, the critic and editor Robert Gottlieb, writing in The New York Times, referred to Life and Fate as "the most impressive novel written since World War II." A multi-faceted novel, one of its main themes is the tragedy of the common people, who have to fight both the invaders and the totalitarianism of their own state. Written in the Soviet Union in 1959, it narrates the history of the family of a Soviet physicist, Viktor Shtrum, during the Great Patriotic War, which is depicted as the struggle between two comparable totalitarian states. Life and Fate ( Russian: Жизнь и судьба) is a novel by Vasily Grossman.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |