US$ 490.00




Add to Wish List
|
Published price: US$ 265.00 Sold outProduction Details: Presented in a buckram-bound solander box, together with a booklet, 'What is War and Peace?' by John Bayley. Bound in metallic gold paper with an inset label. Bound in full goatskin leather, blocked with a design by Jeff Clements commissioned exclusively for this edition and inspired by sketches of troop positions. Set in Poliphilus. Over 300 drawings by Feliks Topolski Size: 10" x 6¼", 1440 pages |
War and Peace is the Russian Iliad. The battles are as epic, the forces as monumental, the vistas as wide. As Virginia Woolf wrote of Leo Tolstoy's panoramic vision of his homeland during the Napoleonic invasions, 'we feel that we have been set on a mountain-top and had a telescope put into our hands'. So entwined was Tolstoy's masterpiece with the Russian psyche that despite a battering from the Bolshevik regime, which found the novel conservative and counter-revolutionary, Stalin refused to have it suppressed.
Above all it is one of the great books of the world, a captivating, wide-screen picture of the eternal conflicts of the human condition. Tolstoy's canvas is immense: the corpse-strewn battlefields of Austerlitz and Borodino, the burning of Moscow, the retreat and capitulation of the Grande Armée. Entangled in 'the strange delirium of war' are the Rostov and the Bolkonsky families, and the brooding aristocrat Pierre Bezuhov - individuals swimming against the tide set in motion by 'that Antichrist' Napoleon. The commanding role is left to Russia itself. The French never lose a major battle, but they succumb to the harshest of winters.
Tolstoy had fought in the Crimea and his writing reeks of the experience. The blood-curdling screams of a soldier as his leg is amputated; a drum beating out the minutes before a prisoner is dragged in front of a firing squad; the raucous banter and gallows humour of the troops. His battle sequences are astonishing, lasting hundreds of pages, as the French and Russian armies snake their way across the map of Europe. But Tolstoy shows us how war infiltrates every corner of society. He takes us deep into life away from the front - soirées in St Petersburg palaces, glittering society dances, peasants tilling the land, the small talk of the Russian elite, the strained partings and emotional reunions of husbands and wives, fathers and sons.
As a contemporary critic wrote, the result is 'a complete picture of human life; a complete picture of the Russia of that day; a complete picture of everything in which people place their happiness and greatness, their grief and humiliation.'
This magnificent new leather-bound edition of War and Peace features the acclaimed translation of Rosemary Edmonds and the brilliantly distinctive illustrations of Feliks Topolski. Born in Poland, Topolski became one of Britain's outstanding 20th-century artists, with a particular interest in capturing scenes of war. He produced more than 300 drawings in his highly idiosyncratic, swirling style for the Folio Society edition of 1971. They remain as timeless as Tolstoy's page-turning prose.
‘There is unanimity in the decision that War and Peace is the world's greatest novel’Delivery of limited editions may take longer than standard editions. Please contact us for more information.
To post a review for War and Peace
you will need an active online account.



