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The Last Station (Movie Tie-in Edition): A Novel of Tolstoy's Final Year (Random
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The Last Station (Movie Tie-in Edition): A Novel of Tolstoy's Final Year (Random House Movie Tie-In Books) Mass market - 2010

by Jay Parini

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Anchor, January 2010. Mass Market . 4 PB Extra Nice +5%.
Used - 4 PB Extra Nice +5%
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Summary

1910. Anna Karenina and War and Peace have made Leo Tolstoy the world's most famous author. But fame comes at a price. In the tumultuous final year of his life, Tolstoy is desperate to find respite, so leaves his large family and the hounding press behind and heads into the wilderness. Too ill to venture beyond the tiny station of Astapovo, he believes his last days will pass in isolation. But as we learn through the journals of those closest to him, the battle for Tolstoy's soul will not be a peaceful one.

From the publisher

JAY PARINI, a poet and novelist, teaches at Middlebury College in Vermont. His novels include The Apprentice Lover and Benjamin’s Crossing. His fifth volume of poetry was The Art of Subtraction: New and Selected Poems (2005). He has written biographies of John Steinbeck, Robert Frost, and William Faulkner, in addition to such nonfiction works as The Art of Teaching (2005), Why Poetry Matters (2008), and Promised Land: Thirteen Books that Changed America (2008). Parini’s reviews and essays appear frequently in major periodicals, including The Chronicle of Higher Education and The Guardian. He lives in Vermont.

Media reviews

“A skillful tapestry. . . . The Last Station illumines the larger than fiction life of a literary giant.”
—USA Today

“One of the best historical novels written in the last twenty years.”
—Gore Vidal

“Utterly satisfying. . . . A loving and thoughtful rendering of the complex character of Leo Tolstoy. . . . Parini captures marvelously the paradoxical nature of this genius whose mind and body seemed ever to be at war.”
Washington Post Book World
 
“Fascinating. . . . Parini has made a valuable contribution to our understanding of Tolstoy.”
—Los Angeles Times Book Review

“A subtle masterpiece. . . . Tolstoy himself would probably have recognized the work of a true artist.”
—The Times Literary Supplement (London)
 
“One of those rare works of fiction that manages to demonstrate both scrupulous historical research and true originality of voice and perception. . . . What lifts this book high above most historical novels is Jay Parini’s remarkable ability to enter the minds of his characters.”
The New York Times Book Review

"A modern classic and an unforgettable portrait of Russia herself on the cusp of revolution."
Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of Stalin
 
“A powerful story. . . . Witty [and] immensely moving. . . . Parini draws the reader into the tumult of the Tolstoy household.”
—Christian Science Monitor
 
“Vivid and moving. . . . It is to Jay Parini’s credit that he has been able to flesh out the saga and make it ever new, to give it a shape and resonance we might have thought unimaginable.”
—Newsday
 
“This wonderful book combines scholarship and sensitive re-creation of a man’s struggle to be true to himself and to others.”
—Dallas Morning News
 
The Last Station offers proof that the historical novel has a lot left to say to and about literature. And any novel with as perfectly beautiful a final sentence as this one deserves to be read all the way through.”
—Philadelphia Inquirer
 
“Poets who write novels are a strange and wonderful breed, in love with language as well as character. In The Last Station, Jay Parini has tackled an awesomely ambitious novel and succeeded brilliantly.”
—Erica Jong
 
“Tolstoy imagined—and illuminated.”
—Boston Globe

“[A] coup of period re-creation. . . . [Parini] is very good at showing how an artist or visionary can be at once idealistic, mundane and incompetently avaricious.”
Chicago Tribune 

“Jay Parini has written a stylish, beautifully paced and utterly beguiling novel.”
The Sunday Times (London)
 
“Entertaining. . . . A three-dimensional portrait of a complex literary figure. . . . Biographers have described the events of Tolstoy’s life in great detail, but none so insightfully and eloquently as Jay Parini in The Last Station.”
—The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
 
“A gem of a historical novel. . . . A novel with a lyric tone that manages to extract excitement from an unlikely subject.”
—Newark Star-Ledger
 
“A searching view of the last year in the life of the author of War and Peace. . . . A kaleidoscopically rich and skillful novel.”
—Publishers Weekly
 
“An impressively knowing and sensitive performance, a wistful late twentieth-century tribute to the giant conflicts of a more titanic age.”
The Observer (London)