![]() His lengthy, absorbing novelwhich rejected the compromises of a lifetime and earned its author denunciation and disgracetestifies eloquently to that spirit. Yet Grossman suggests that the spirit of freedom can never be completely crushed. Ironically, just as Stalingrad is liberated from the Germans, many of the characters find themselves bound in new slavery to the Soviet government. His huge cast of characters includes an old Bolshevik now under arrest, a physicist pressured to make his scientific discoveries conform to ""socialist reality'' and a Jewish doctor en route to the gas chambers in occupied Russia. Grossman offers a bitter, compelling vision of a totalitarian regime where the spirit of freedom that arose among those under fire was feared by the state at least as much as were the Nazis. ![]() Completed in 1960 and then confiscated by the KGB, it remained unpublished at the author's death in 1964 it was smuggled into the West in 1980. ![]() Obviously modeled on War and Peace, this sweeping account of the siege of Stalingrad aims to give as panoramic a view of Soviet society during World War II as Tolstoy did of Russian life in the epoch of the Napoleonic Wars. Calling Life and Fate the greatest Russian novel of the 20th Century Leon Aron, Resident Scholar and Director of Russian Studies, American Enterprise. ![]()
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