Why should you read Tolstoy's "War and Peace"? - Brendan Pelsue

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2017
  • View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should-...
    "War and Peace." A tome. A slog. The sort of book you shouldn’t read in bed because if you fall asleep it could give you a concussion. Right? Only partly. "War and Peace" is a long book, sure, but it’s also a thrilling examination of history populated with some of the deepest, most realistic characters you’ll find anywhere. Brendan Pelsue shares everything you need to know to read this classic book.
    Lesson by Brendan Pelsue, animation by Patrick Smith.

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @TEDEd
    @TEDEd  Před 7 lety +8039

    Correction: The Decembrists revolted against the conservative Tsar Nicholas I in 1825, not Tsar Nicholas II.

    • @rafacqz
      @rafacqz Před 7 lety +132

      Yeah, that kept me a bit confused there!

    • @maresgoez
      @maresgoez Před 7 lety +113

      Reupload it please.

    • @bobfl42
      @bobfl42 Před 7 lety +22

      That got me counting on my figures..

    • @Niceguy312373636
      @Niceguy312373636 Před 7 lety +92

      a common mistake, as Nicholas II's is far well known and thus people will generally associate revolution in Russia to his name *ehm* the February & October rebolution

    • @kaziislam2785
      @kaziislam2785 Před 7 lety +35

      TED-Ed is there public access to the original 1200 page version of War and Peace? Because the scale of what he was writing sounds like it could be converted into a video game.

  • @stiltzkinvanserine5164
    @stiltzkinvanserine5164 Před 7 lety +17234

    Reading a book like this is similar to entering a relationship; it requires commitment.

    • @officerpulaski1946
      @officerpulaski1946 Před 6 lety +178

      very well said

    • @daan260
      @daan260 Před 5 lety +271

      Pretty much the second real book I'm about to read (I only listen to audio books). I'm on page 7 and I'm starting to realize what I got myself into.

    • @mishtrong
      @mishtrong Před 5 lety +115

      And mutual consent.

    • @QUARTERMASTEREMI6
      @QUARTERMASTEREMI6 Před 5 lety +9

      @Stiltzkin Vanserine Hah! Quite true.

    • @mj-yo7vt
      @mj-yo7vt Před 4 lety +90

      I know a girl who read it 3 times

  • @EpicFallOut
    @EpicFallOut Před 4 lety +10303

    These "why you should read" videos are great because they're like trailers to books. I've only ever heard "War and Peace" used as an idiom

    • @missmadness973
      @missmadness973 Před 3 lety +83

      Bell Maximus Cattus in Russia it is a must to read 'War and Peace‘ at school

    • @mikegriffen244
      @mikegriffen244 Před 3 lety +52

      @Bell Maximus Cattus plenty of people have time you just have to dedicate yourself to it, use those six hours and read and then the next day read for one or two just find time you would be doing nothing or say even before bed, instead of social media just read for a while.

    • @eminemilly
      @eminemilly Před 3 lety +8

      @Bell Maximus Cattus is there a video about communist propaganda in hollywood? gonna look

    • @FK_loving
      @FK_loving Před 3 lety +33

      @@eminemilly how does Tolstoy must read rule in Russian schools relevant to communist propoganda or any kind of propoganda? And how is Tolstoy related to communist at all? Sure you are a person who use War and Pease as an idiom.

    • @VILLAIN999
      @VILLAIN999 Před 3 lety +11

      Bruh tolstoy is a famous writer

  • @user-pu1dm4bw9g
    @user-pu1dm4bw9g Před rokem +1041

    My Russian literature teacher once said: “War and peace should be read at least twice in your life. The first time is at school for the general development and study of the history of Russia. The second time is when you are at a conscious age (30-40 years old). Exactly the second time you will understand the genius of Leo Tolstoy's thought".

    • @iainshepherd360
      @iainshepherd360 Před rokem +19

      exactly. Being much older than 30-40, I've re-read it and now understand why it is considered the greatest novel ever written

    • @patsysmith7745
      @patsysmith7745 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ❤🙏

    • @jimw.4161
      @jimw.4161 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Interesting!
      I'm 79 and just starting to read the book that I have intended to read for years.
      Do you think I will live long enough to finish it?

    • @user-cr2yx6ky4y
      @user-cr2yx6ky4y Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@jimw.4161yes, if you have 3-4 hours in day. I have read all toms through 2 months, it easy to read

    • @jimw.4161
      @jimw.4161 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@user-cr2yx6ky4y
      Thank you for your encouragement. 👍
      I am slogging my way through Tolstoy's masterpiece and have been amply rewarded for my efforts.
      War and Peace is a remarkable book and should be on everyone's reading list at some point in their lives.

  • @ranabanik1354
    @ranabanik1354 Před 3 lety +2856

    Publisher: How many pages you want to write?
    Tolstoy: Yes.

    • @richardnascaw1237
      @richardnascaw1237 Před 3 lety +5

      How many pages does the book have ?

    • @user-en8zo9by4z
      @user-en8zo9by4z Před 3 lety +35

      lol the publisher was paying tolstoy 75 silver rubles for 1 page and obviously tolstoy was interested in writing as much as possible

    • @Perririri
      @Perririri Před 2 lety +3

      Da normie, literally

    • @shabahfarook7527
      @shabahfarook7527 Před rokem

      @@richardnascaw1237 800+

    • @MargaritaMagdalena
      @MargaritaMagdalena Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@richardnascaw1237 1400

  • @tehleelmir4407
    @tehleelmir4407 Před 4 lety +4305

    and how can he tell the whole story, without the story of big bang

    • @bmngatia474
      @bmngatia474 Před 3 lety +18

      haha

    • @shradh99
      @shradh99 Před 3 lety +24

      Good one 😂😂

    • @billsykes2977
      @billsykes2977 Před 3 lety +150

      And how can he tell the story about big bang, without the story of Queen Elisabeth causing it.

    • @mk_rexx
      @mk_rexx Před 3 lety +155

      A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking is just a prequel to War and Peace

    • @TheCosmerenaut1
      @TheCosmerenaut1 Před 3 lety +1

      Tehleel Mir haha

  • @cedmelancon
    @cedmelancon Před 4 lety +3689

    I was able to read it when I stopped trying to remember how every character related to every other character and just enjoyed the ride.

    • @observeirene
      @observeirene Před 4 lety +78

      Mood

    • @joy941
      @joy941 Před 4 lety +6

      Lol

    • @danielkolosov6406
      @danielkolosov6406 Před 4 lety +106

      We all give up sooner or later...

    • @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892
      @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892 Před 3 lety +174

      Seriously. I don't even always care figuring out who is actually who. Think of it as a painting, or a dance. Yet, sometimes Tolstoy writes 25 pages for something that could be said in one sentence, it's just more fun that way.

    • @deekshasharma2833
      @deekshasharma2833 Před 3 lety +9

      Exactly how I am reading it

  • @marthawoodworth6907
    @marthawoodworth6907 Před 3 lety +273

    "War and Peace" is easy to read. It's made up of many short chapters like little stories that add up so that reading it is like eating peanuts...once you start, you can't stop. I loved every minute of it.

    • @bryanmelton5538
      @bryanmelton5538 Před 3 lety +6

      I HAVEN'T READ IT YET SOUND'S LIKE A GOOD BOOK

    • @darcymurphy1769
      @darcymurphy1769 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Best book I have ever read, to pull all these individual stories together is a masterpiece.

    • @hewitc
      @hewitc Před 7 měsíci

      The last Epilogue was a waste. It wasn't part of the novel.

    • @preciousamaechi689
      @preciousamaechi689 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I think all Tolstoy’s works are easy to read. I’ve only read one, “The death of Ivan Ilych” just 60 pages long, I couldn’t stop until I finished. Nothing shook me more about death than that book!

  •  Před 3 lety +222

    Rather than thinking how Tolstoy felt I want to see how his wife felt... She had to copy that monster of a book seven times by hand, so he could do corrections on it...

    • @mrOL100
      @mrOL100 Před 3 lety +20

      what else do you need wives for if you don't have a typewriter..

  • @user-us9qu2hk1s
    @user-us9qu2hk1s Před 4 lety +8999

    "... and if its length intimidates you, just imagine how poor Tolstoy felt.."
    Poor Tolstoy? Poor his wife, Sofia, who rewrote about 8 (if i'm not mistaken) variations of "War and Peace" BY HAND! 8 times!
    Also they had 13 children and she did take an active part in raising them)
    Love the novel, btw)

    • @thyanhnguyen5056
      @thyanhnguyen5056 Před 4 lety +127

      @Edward HARRISON [13M3] His wife was Sophia Tolstoya, and his sister was actually Mariya Tolstoya.

    • @Science-ev1he
      @Science-ev1he Před 4 lety +231

      I’m sure she was very intimidated by it’s length. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

    • @AA-np5tj
      @AA-np5tj Před 4 lety +640

      He also abused her heavily and made her give birth all the time. He was a tyrant, a horrible man. You can see his misogyny in his books too. He makes women useless side characters who would rather forgive their husbands for cheating or crazy Anna Karenina-like main characters.

    • @user-us9qu2hk1s
      @user-us9qu2hk1s Před 4 lety +364

      @@AA-np5tj yes he was a horrible person, i agree with that. I wouldn't say that his women characters are that simple,though. I find them rather complex and sometimes actually very interesting (like Maria Bolklnskaya, for example).

    • @Delulu-To-Trululu
      @Delulu-To-Trululu Před 4 lety +51

      life was slower at that time, i think she was ok and happy

  • @adrianovoscofficial5308
    @adrianovoscofficial5308 Před 7 lety +5210

    And I can only make a 1 page essay

    • @czr1238
      @czr1238 Před 7 lety +390

      double space, 12 font?

    • @tillur
      @tillur Před 7 lety +279

      Rochana Samarasinghe double space, 14 font comic sans, 2 inch margins XD

    • @jacksonpercy8044
      @jacksonpercy8044 Před 7 lety +93

      I can barely write a single paragraph...

    • @riyazuo
      @riyazuo Před 7 lety +115

      THE UNDERGROUNDER i can't even think of a good topic to write about.

    • @alpha9605
      @alpha9605 Před 7 lety +80

      i ca

  • @RandomDude-bo1lg
    @RandomDude-bo1lg Před 3 lety +183

    I don't have time to read.
    *continuing scrolling YT for hours*

  • @BeyondBaito
    @BeyondBaito Před 3 lety +511

    man when they sang "It's a complicated Russian novel" they weren't kidding.

    • @arandomcomment1092
      @arandomcomment1092 Před 3 lety +33

      Is this the program we were supposed to check out?

    • @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892
      @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892 Před 3 lety +9

      ...Why do I find it's actually a somewhat easy read?? :o Seriously, background of history study may be of service here, but also - what? Knowledge about "the truth" of wars, bereft of propaganda? Life experience? A non-atheist approach to life/the world/people/the universe? A slight clue about the russian mentality? Possible.

    • @messupd
      @messupd Před 3 lety +43

      everyone's got 9 different names!

    • @sallygrainger3964
      @sallygrainger3964 Před 3 lety +26

      so look it up in your programmmm

    • @fallforasong
      @fallforasong Před 3 lety +10

      We'd appreciate it, thanks a lot

  • @shahriarkabir2086
    @shahriarkabir2086 Před 4 lety +3003

    So many books, so little time to read. :(

  • @thatsawkward101
    @thatsawkward101 Před 4 lety +4645

    Stop reading the comments and actually start reading the book.

    • @maanyashukla326
      @maanyashukla326 Před 4 lety +111

      Its size is the most discouraging thing about it

    • @jadenyuki3138
      @jadenyuki3138 Před 4 lety +16

      E no

    • @tiffanycampbell7017
      @tiffanycampbell7017 Před 4 lety +12

      Make me😆

    • @lostinsauce4515
      @lostinsauce4515 Před 4 lety +18

      Ugh ok fine

    • @angrybirdz9287
      @angrybirdz9287 Před 4 lety +19

      When using an audio book with the book in hand it's not so intimidating. For some reason the mind doesn't view such tasks as a mountain so large when it doesn't have to do all the work on its own.

  • @BotteEnTouche
    @BotteEnTouche Před 2 lety +141

    At the end, I had become so attached to the story and characters that when I finished it, it felt like I had lost someone very dear to me. To me, it's the greatest book ever written.

    • @samuelblack4792
      @samuelblack4792 Před 5 měsíci +4

      I felt the same way when I finished Les Misérables. I actually cried from the loss. These books are larger-than-life, and you feel it.

  • @dorotapeniasko
    @dorotapeniasko Před 2 lety +134

    i cannot describe how much i LOVE russian literature

  • @SebastiansFacts
    @SebastiansFacts Před 7 lety +2203

    I just started reading War and Peace a couple of weeks ago. I love these coincidences, when something that's just happening in my life is talked about on youtube. Feels good, I don't really know why though.

  • @hyndbenmeradi514
    @hyndbenmeradi514 Před 7 lety +1984

    This category of videos is basically one of the best ones. you should do "Why should you read" more often :)

  • @moirarusaw9567
    @moirarusaw9567 Před 3 lety +422

    I'm 14 years old, halfway through it, and have only been reading it for a month. I made it my goal this year to finish before 2022, and I am absolutely determined to do it. I believe I can and will. I made it my goal because I had no idea what it was about, but it was so commonly talked about, yet I did not know more than 2 people who had read it before. I can honestly tell you that so far it is the best book I have ever read (and I do read quite a lot). What is more important to me than anything else about the book is Tolstoys immaculate way of describing characters. It is so deep and profound, and it has opened a window into viewing the ways others see things, and it is stunningly beautiful.

    • @dieke8978
      @dieke8978 Před 3 lety +9

      Good luck and have fun reading it!

    • @missg.5940
      @missg.5940 Před 2 lety +13

      Are you sticking with it? It is on my reading “ bucket list”. At 63 l suppose l should get started 🤓😷💉💉🇨🇦

    • @agentcarter4821
      @agentcarter4821 Před 2 lety +1

      OmStars same, I'm hoping to finish it by Thanksgiving.

    • @Rhumnchoke
      @Rhumnchoke Před 2 lety +6

      Did you finish it ??

    • @jacobcoryell8258
      @jacobcoryell8258 Před 2 lety +9

      Did you do it bro? I'm 15 and thinking about reading it after the art of war

  • @a_Certain_Scientific_Absurdist

    Учитывая сколько за день мы читаем комментариев - Эта книга не такая уж и большая)

  • @eizhowa
    @eizhowa Před 6 lety +7090

    If it had dragons, everyone would be all over it

    • @skynet_cyberdyne_systems
      @skynet_cyberdyne_systems Před 5 lety +46

      lol

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 5 lety +344

      Right? It sounds like a real-world Russian Game of Thrones

    • @adrianmpopa
      @adrianmpopa Před 5 lety +205

      But it does have dragons. French dragons of the imperial guard as heavy cavalry :)) And they reach Moscow. And then there is a lot of ice and fire drama :)

    • @napoleonbonaparteempereurd4676
      @napoleonbonaparteempereurd4676 Před 4 lety +5

      @@adrianmpopa
      Send in the Guard

    • @Sam-O-matic
      @Sam-O-matic Před 4 lety +67

      Nah... No need to over complicate it. Just make an manga or anime series based around it and make the women waifus and the guys anime protagonist and the weeaboos will pour in.

  • @captainskeleton3994
    @captainskeleton3994 Před 5 lety +3130

    I don't know why every time i read Russian Literature ( Famous ones) , I always get a sense of profound emptiness inside me , a sense of awe, mixed with sadness. It makes me question our society, our culture, our humanity. These kind of books change who you are, enriching the mind with thoughts. Forces me to think critically and understand why Karl Marx's communism got so popular in Russia, why people would want such classless society. Russian people had gone through a lot in the past couple of centuries. From Bangladesh.
    Edit: Typing error.

    • @rohith3898
      @rohith3898 Před 4 lety +125

      They committed suicide by taking up communism.

    • @CDB12345
      @CDB12345 Před 4 lety +396

      @@rohith3898 we comitted suicide taking up capitalism

    • @travoltik
      @travoltik Před 4 lety +57

      Mateus Costa nope 2 centuries of capitalism past and we are still alive, but communism didn’t make it to our days :(

    • @travoltik
      @travoltik Před 4 lety +28

      Mateus Costa and I hope never makes

    • @CDB12345
      @CDB12345 Před 4 lety +197

      @@travoltik communism never happened, se had leninism, stalinism, maoism, chavism and other "tentatives" spoiled by autoritarian leaders, dictators. Whilst capitalism survives on the cost of many lives, and time to time we have some kind of crisis (1929,1970,1980,2008,2014, and now), capitalism is literally slavery on makeup

  • @zukhraolimova6451
    @zukhraolimova6451 Před 3 lety +70

    Вот это он прочитал: "Ясная поляна". Incredible)

    • @andreylobanov721
      @andreylobanov721 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The stress was off, but he's got the spirit alright)

  • @user-ie7on4cm3q
    @user-ie7on4cm3q Před 2 lety +151

    Hey everyone! I’m Liubov, a Russian student studying the Literature and I have something to tell you about this ‘epic novel’ (in our schools and unis War and Peace is taught to be written in this genre). First of all, thank you, TEDed, for making such videos because every time I see people who reads such a novel (or at least tries to do it :)) I feel very proud of my culture. Also I’d like to give you a life hack: if you get puzzled by the really difficult relationship between the characters here, you can try to make a scheme with all the bonds that link the characters with each other.
    Have a nice day! 😉❤️

  • @justflyingbymedivac3161
    @justflyingbymedivac3161 Před 5 lety +546

    Being Russian feels kinda cool when you listen to how another people tries to say our names and words with their ascent such as "Yasnaya polyana" and "Tolstoy". But " Decembers" is very clever adaptation of "Decabrists". Like!

    • @maxwell8824
      @maxwell8824 Před 2 lety +72

      На самом деле нам крупно повезло что мы можем прочесть это все в оригинале, ровным счётом как их книги могут утратить часть шарма в многочисленных переводах

    • @M43782
      @M43782 Před 2 lety +84

      "Special military operation and peace" by Leo Tolstoy

    • @minttail72
      @minttail72 Před 2 lety +9

      @@M43782 тонко

    • @avalell
      @avalell Před 2 lety +19

      @@M43782 "special military operation and national betrayal" will be more accurate

    • @TinLeadHammer
      @TinLeadHammer Před 2 lety

      Decemberists.

  • @bacchusstyle
    @bacchusstyle Před 7 lety +2080

    You must be kidding! Bought this book just two days ago, two days! And now, this video. Definitely, I have to read it!

    • @JohnCena8351
      @JohnCena8351 Před 7 lety +37

      bacchusstyle You bought it 2 days ago and still didn't read it yet? wft?

    • @bacchusstyle
      @bacchusstyle Před 7 lety +48

      John Cena It was not the only one book I bought two days ago. Usually, shorter books first and longer at the final. Since War and Peace have 1300 pages...

    • @JohnCena8351
      @JohnCena8351 Před 7 lety +4

      bacchusstyle Oh okay. That makes sense :D

    • @Arominit
      @Arominit Před 7 lety +39

      I bought this book 7 years ago, definitely have to read it! I'll start... tomorrow ;)

    • @bacchusstyle
      @bacchusstyle Před 7 lety +13

      Arominit Then John Cena's first comment definitely was for you!

  • @sherazahmad5232
    @sherazahmad5232 Před 3 lety +24

    "In trying to understand his own times, he had become immersed in the years piled up behind him".

  • @olesialakovich5926
    @olesialakovich5926 Před 4 lety +352

    I remember how my teacher made me read this book at school . But I was a teenager who wasn’t interested in literature at all. So I just read a short version of the masterpiece. Now I feel that I’m ready to read this book in entirely

    • @ahmedalthaf2028
      @ahmedalthaf2028 Před 3 lety +6

      Good girl!☝🏼

    • @moirarusaw9567
      @moirarusaw9567 Před 3 lety +5

      Hehe and im a 14 year old reading it of my own accord (Im about half-way through, don't you dare doubt that I will finish)

    • @anjanajnair
      @anjanajnair Před 3 lety

      @@moirarusaw9567 did you finish it?

    • @moirarusaw9567
      @moirarusaw9567 Před 3 lety +1

      @@anjanajnair not quite, I just started summer so I will have a lot more time to read, I was just super busy with school and volleyball stuff. its amazing though

    • @user-up7bl4hv9f
      @user-up7bl4hv9f Před 3 lety +5

      Do not waste your time,I read it ,and it isn’t worth the time,I was falling asleep all the time

  • @wcjerky
    @wcjerky Před 4 lety +1176

    I spent my time living near Verona, Italy with _War and Peace_ in my possession. Although I did not finish it before I returned home, I had made an impressionable dent. As I like to have reading material on long flights, I had kept it in my bag. Due to its sheer volume, when it was being scanned at the Verona airport, the attendant grabbed my attention and asked if she could look at it. The look on her face gradually turned to dismay as she flipped through the pages of the paperback tome. As she returned the libram, the outcome of the transpired events reached me; unfortunately for her pride, _War and Peace_ contained neither white powder nor contraband.
    _War and Peace_ is just a very big book.

    • @zissou4978
      @zissou4978 Před 3 lety +39

      I love your comment for some reason

    • @Anindyatejo
      @Anindyatejo Před 2 lety +81

      Your choice of light reading during flight is really strange.....

    • @amitmeena2961
      @amitmeena2961 Před 2 lety +55

      You write your comments like you read your books

    • @themightyblat5007
      @themightyblat5007 Před 2 lety +9

      You sound really pretentious.

    • @irenakrylova2506
      @irenakrylova2506 Před 2 lety +11

      It’ has been actually read by all the 9th graders in Soviet schools, only one of the long list of summer reading…

  • @OGTacitus
    @OGTacitus Před rokem +12

    i'll give you some info why many russians have a ptsd because of this book:
    - you have to read it in high school (16-18 y.o.)
    - you have one month to read it, along with other subjects and everyday life. oh, you also have exam of it
    - ppl have poor knowledge of that time period (thx, comies), so many feels odd in text
    - some important parts of a story are written in french, coz Tolstoy was aristocrat, and wrote it for aristicrats, and few if any modern reprints translate them to russian directly in text, most do it by small hints below main text, sometimes ignoring repeated prases, so you need to keep in mind also where it was translated.
    this is one of a biggest nails in coffin of will to read for many in post-soviet states

  • @glassjaw2007
    @glassjaw2007 Před 3 lety +57

    Probably the greatest book ive ever read along with Dostoievsky´s Brothers Karamazov and Cormac Mccarthy´s Blood Meridian, experiencing this book and finishing felt like an entire college history career and you get this profound sense of awe that you are witnessing a work of art.

  • @TheHarabeli100
    @TheHarabeli100 Před 7 lety +559

    I should totally read this book. I've read "Anna Karenina" by Tolstoy and I've been so fascinated by his style of writing. There's something so deep and heart touching at the Russian books that I can't find at the others. I wish I had more free time to read "War and peace". I'm sure it's a masterpiece.

    • @trolldevildean4522
      @trolldevildean4522 Před 7 lety +108

      Russian authors have a very interesting take on humanity as a whole. They delve into the human psyche deeper than any other. Anna Karenina is the perfect example of how much you can hate the deeds of a person but completely understand the circumstances in which they were done. Dostoevsky and Nabokov are two other wonderful writers.

    • @giorgivadachkoria7308
      @giorgivadachkoria7308 Před 6 lety

      TheHarabeli100 is

    • @sela5613
      @sela5613 Před 6 lety +15

      I really do suggest all of Tolstoy's books. It's fascinating how he viewed the world. There has also been many great TV shows, musicals, and other books even based on his works. I suggest Dave Malloy's "Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812" after reading War and Peace.

    • @spudgunn8695
      @spudgunn8695 Před 5 lety +3

      Anna Karenina is a marvelous book, but War and Peace is an over verbose, dull and, tbh, at least 8 times longer than it needs to be. Anyone who tells your how great it is is either:
      A- an incredibly boring person whose idea of extreme sport is stamp collecting, or (and far more likely!)
      B- has never actually READ the damn thing, and is just a pretentious BS merchant.
      My advice would be to find something more interesting to do for the month or four it will take you to read( depending on whether you have a job or not!)

    • @kathorsees
      @kathorsees Před 5 lety +19

      I don't think you should worry about it's size at all if you read "Anna Karenina". "War and Peace" is only 1.5 times longer than "Anna Karenina". Reading with an average speed, you'll only need 20 hours to finish "Anna'" and 30 hours to finish "W&P". That's 10 and 15 days respectively if you read 2 hours a day before sleep (this calculation that Google gave me seems about right - I did finish W&P in two weeks). People really exaggerate the size of the book, it's 2 times shorter than the "Harry Potter" series that so many have read (and a lot of them more than once). It's only a little bit longer than "Lord of the Rings". It takes much less time than watching "The Game of Thrones".

  • @abraxamovic
    @abraxamovic Před 7 lety +1970

    Here, he look more like Rasputin than Tolstoy

  • @Bukson
    @Bukson Před 2 lety +9

    I'll tell you. On summer vacation I decided to finally read War and Peace. Even though it's enormous, almost infinite, it is the most interesting book I read so far. For real, the way how characters interact with each other always intrigues you. Especially when they meat each other in different places, just accidentally meet each other and they are connected to each other. I haven't felt feelings like this ever before
    He's a genius. It's my favourite book

  • @tombrunila2695
    @tombrunila2695 Před 3 lety +35

    In Russian the name of the book is "Voina i mir". "Mir" means "peace" but also "world". Years ago when I studied russian our professor said that the word "mir" in the context of the book meant what in France is called "Le Monde" "The World" or more precisely people who are important like the aristocracy. He said the actually the book should be named "War and aristocracy". If you think about the book it is about war and the aristocracy.

    • @johnnybgood9847
      @johnnybgood9847 Před 2 lety +2

      War and society. That will be right

    • @user-jf8pj7wb5n
      @user-jf8pj7wb5n Před 2 lety +1

      No, it's not. Your professor is wrong. In pre-revolutionary Russian language there were two words "mir" - мир (piece) and мiръ (world). The original had the first option - мир. This was explained to me by my teacher of Russian language and literature in college.

    • @tombrunila2695
      @tombrunila2695 Před 2 lety

      @@user-jf8pj7wb5n , the original title of the book when it was published in 1869 was "Война и миръ" that is, it used the form that meant "the World". If you care to look at the Wikipedia entry about "War and peace" you will find there a picture of the title page of the 1869 First edition of the book.

    • @user-jf8pj7wb5n
      @user-jf8pj7wb5n Před 2 lety +1

      @@tombrunila2695 You do not see the difference between "мИр" and "мiръ"? If you add "ъ" to the word мир, this will not change the meaning of the word. In Russian, it was customary to put "ъ" at the end, but the Soviets changed the rules of the language.

  • @lijojose1730
    @lijojose1730 Před 7 lety +4271

    he should have started from Adam and eave

    • @leightonki6726
      @leightonki6726 Před 7 lety +25

      Rofl

    • @malikrahman8649
      @malikrahman8649 Před 7 lety +202

      lijo jose The big bang

    • @a.s7252
      @a.s7252 Před 7 lety +16

      lijo jose HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    • @Pilgrim1st
      @Pilgrim1st Před 7 lety +126

      I thought the book was based upon real historical figures with fictional ones mixed in, not the other way around?

    • @lilacosmanthus
      @lilacosmanthus Před 7 lety +110

      There's already a book for that.

  • @youtubecommentor1338
    @youtubecommentor1338 Před 4 lety +1018

    am not much of a reader, so it took me 18 months to read War & Peace. It was worth it. A vicarious experience through 4-5 characters. Initially I thought it was gonna be a book old people read, but you'd surprised how all the 5 Point of View characters are young & how deeply you can relate to it as a youngster. Never judge this book by its 'Classic' tag. It is surprisingly Progressive despite being called as a Classic.

    • @zaraal-laleh6937
      @zaraal-laleh6937 Před 3 lety +20

      I have to read it in 1 month for a school project😬

    • @youtubecommentor1338
      @youtubecommentor1338 Před 3 lety +12

      @@zaraal-laleh6937 watch War and Peace (2016) & read the abridged version

    • @moirarusaw9567
      @moirarusaw9567 Před 3 lety +21

      YESSSSS im 14 and reading it. Only been reading for a month but im about halfway through. Lmao I wanted to challenge myself but its honestly so amazing that its just a joy to read at this point (though it can be quite dull in the war parts sometimes)

    • @kingamoeboid3887
      @kingamoeboid3887 Před 3 lety +3

      @@youtubecommentor1338 I read the whole thing in 2 weeks.

    • @kamalindsey
      @kamalindsey Před 2 lety +2

      "a wholesome experience"
      I mean, sure, literally... but...

  • @ampersandcastle1091
    @ampersandcastle1091 Před 3 lety +58

    I was considering reading this after falling in love with the masterpiece that is Natasha, Pierre and The Great Comet of 1812. Now I definitely will!

  • @balinthonvari7723
    @balinthonvari7723 Před 4 lety

    The efforts made behind these videos are incredible. Thank you
    !

  • @LiviotheDoubleFang
    @LiviotheDoubleFang Před 7 lety +307

    One of my favorite quotes from the old MTV show Daria was when the english teacher asked her "now why do you think Tolstoy had to make War and Peace so darn... unpleasant?" to which the titular character replied, "So they wouldn't pester him to make a sequel?"

    • @aet5807
      @aet5807 Před 4 lety +3

      LiviotheDoubleFang god I Loved that show.

  • @glorysky1998
    @glorysky1998 Před 4 lety +314

    "He had wanted to write a short novel"
    Me: hah, he said short

  • @evaggelia8815
    @evaggelia8815 Před 3 lety +9

    So im 15 , and last year , as my dad was packing some of his books , i found war and peace and asked him if the book was good. He laughed and told me that neither he or my mother could ever read more than one page, and im gonna tell you, that sounded like a challenge to me😂😂😂 sooner or later , i really fell in love with the book and would read it day to night. I finished it in the period of one month!! (Even imagine i took some big brakes in between so if i was counting days it would be around 15). Now as for the book. It is very very interesting as it really makes you leave the live of not one , not two , but many different personalities and you watch them grow in time. I was very touched by it really. It also makes some very interesting question about world and really made me started thinking more. I fully agree it is a must read!!! And if you feel you cant keep up with the names, try to put them in a sequence in your mind.(what i did was relating the names with the first time i heard about them and then with their personalities -which also helped with my memory) have a nice read!!

  • @Scottlp2
    @Scottlp2 Před 3 lety +9

    1. Get Maude Translation and 2. print out a list of characters to refer to as you read (they all have 3 names). Great book.

  • @RrockCj
    @RrockCj Před 7 lety +575

    "Ясная поляна" прозвучало забавно его устами )

    • @Belemonguin
      @Belemonguin Před 7 lety +6

      Ударение не там поставили. яснАя

    • @enosunim
      @enosunim Před 7 lety +22

      Rrock Cj, ох уш энти иносранцы )

    • @anastasiadomina1979
      @anastasiadomina1979 Před 7 lety +1

      ага

    • @alexander_farkas
      @alexander_farkas Před 7 lety +7

      Там еще и "поляна" прочитали по-польски, перепутав букву L с Ł

    • @user-yl2wm2gy3z
      @user-yl2wm2gy3z Před 7 lety +1

      minus1, Зачем так на ровном месте обижать?

  • @dmitrykudryavtsev2127
    @dmitrykudryavtsev2127 Před 4 lety +65

    In the Soviet school, you were supposed to read it during summer vacation at an age of 15-16. I remember the literature lessons where we would retell the chapters. We would read the next chapter to retell before a lesson, and then while the first victim was retelling it, the whole class was secretely reading the following chapter, struggling the distraction from the reteller and waiting their destiny.

    • @dania7716
      @dania7716 Před 10 měsíci +1

      haha that sounds so harsh but it makes me laugh at what kids would come up with

  • @andreatarasova4855
    @andreatarasova4855 Před 3 lety +42

    No main characters? What about Andrei Bolkonsky, Natasha Rostova and Pierre Bezukhov?

    • @yigitamahayatmbitmis8436
      @yigitamahayatmbitmis8436 Před 3 lety +13

      i think his mean is not only *one* main characters but i agree with u Andrei,Pierre,Natasha,Nikolai are main characters

    • @user-wx2zg5xk2l
      @user-wx2zg5xk2l Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed

    • @pranjalbajpai885
      @pranjalbajpai885 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you read it? 🧐

    • @andreatarasova4855
      @andreatarasova4855 Před 2 lety +3

      @@pranjalbajpai885 Two times. Why? Now I'm reading Dumas. It is something wrong about reading?

  • @climbingtogether
    @climbingtogether Před 2 lety +2

    This series 'Why You Should Read' is an amazing initiative. Thanks a lot TED-Ed.

  • @Spooksandooks
    @Spooksandooks Před 7 lety +2233

    I've seen this video, do I still need to read War and Peace?

  • @whosafraidoferiknrding4470
    @whosafraidoferiknrding4470 Před 7 lety +635

    I've read War and Peace twice - both times in my twenties. While I don't think I'll ever read it again, I always recommend it. However, as far as Russian literature goes, nothing compares to 'The Brothers Karamazov' by Dostoyevsky.

    • @Jojothhh
      @Jojothhh Před 7 lety +27

      no I read them both and for me Tolstoi feels much smoother to read than Dostojevski

    • @whosafraidoferiknrding4470
      @whosafraidoferiknrding4470 Před 7 lety +49

      Now we know what your particular opinion is.

    • @MikusSzop
      @MikusSzop Před 7 lety +3

      Who's Afraid of Erik Nørding? Do you think that I'd enjoy it (Brothers Karmazov) if I hated Crime and Punishment?
      I enjoy reading around the topic of free will, so I added this book into my amazon wish list some time ago, but after reading ' the double' and 'crime and punishment' I don't think Dostoyevsky suits my taste :(.
      For the record I enjoyed Bulgakovs 'Master and Margarita'. (Don't know if that's of any relevance :D)

    • @whosafraidoferiknrding4470
      @whosafraidoferiknrding4470 Před 7 lety +10

      Mikus Interesting question! The very first Russian work I read was Crime and Punishment and the second, by coincidence, just happened to be The Double. I liked C and P but didn't love it and equate its reputation to other books such as The Old Man And The Sea by Hemingway and 1984 by Orwell; meaning, I've never understood why these works are what is best known to their respective authors. I think the first part of The Double is genius but soon after I lost interest.
      To answer your question, I think if you were completely put off by C and P then you probably will not enjoy The Brothers K, despite it being a vastly superior work. However, it is one of the great works of literature and I would still recommend to you and anyone else give it a try. If you do have an interest in Russian lit., 'Fathers and Sons by Turgenev is a work that might be more up your alley.

    • @MikusSzop
      @MikusSzop Před 7 lety +2

      Who's Afraid of Erik Nørding? I just found Rodion's behaviour frustrating :P. I might give Dostoyevsky one more chance, but it won't happen until I have read Mann's 'Dr Faustus'!

  • @vikawilson3541
    @vikawilson3541 Před 3 lety +12

    War and Peace used to be a required reading for raising 9th graders in the Soviet Union (Dostoevsvkiy’s Crime and Punishment was part of a required reading for grade 8)). I reread it in my 40-s again and enjoyed it immensely. I’m glad we read and studied it back in school as it lets you dip into this level of literature and then you will always know the difference from “story telling” which is what is passed for literature everywhere now. If you haven’t read it, I strongly recommend it. Just start reading and you won’t be able to stop although I can’t imagine reading it in English. The BBC adaptation of it a couple of years ago was pretty good to my pleasant surprise despite them changing a lot of characters visually (compare to how Tolstoy describes them in the book), but they captured the spirit quite well.

  • @joelee5344
    @joelee5344 Před 2 lety +10

    Why read it? Because it is brilliant. I admit I started it a few times and struggled to get past the first 100 pages because the storylines seemed to change - it wasn't linear. But when I finally got through those 100 pages (still good but a bit unconnected IMO), I was rewarded by its sheer magnitude and brilliance and humanity and insightfulness. His characters are so real - they are not caricatures like in most novels. My recommendation - persevere and you will be well rewarded.

  • @ayushsadotra9426
    @ayushsadotra9426 Před 4 lety +347

    Cant believe that I finally read this masterpiece. About to finish it for the second time. Just like we watch some of our favorite films over and over again, similarly reading now for the second time opened many doors that were missed in the first.
    The sheer magnanimity of the world depicted by Count Tolstoy is breathtaking. Its sort of a crash course to everything one could think of. Of life and death, love and hatred, courage and fear, greed and generosity, and finally war and peace.
    This beautiful work demands attention and respect and in return would give you an insight that has the power to shake your soul. It celebrates life and its intricacies like no other written work.
    Tolstoy with this masterpiece seems to wage a war with the learned men of ages indefinitely. Whether it's a historian, scholar, king, kingmaker, guardian of reason or religion, he doesn't spare anyone who's not looking deep into underlying facts of nature, reality and causality. Well, one could argue that who's he to wage a war in the first place? But there's no denying the fact that he's gonna get hold of you once you start flipping the pages.
    The dude delivers razor blade insight into almost every law governing mankind in general at the age of 35.

    • @alexlalex5223
      @alexlalex5223 Před 4 lety +11

      And which is even more mind-blowing, Tolstoy somehow managed to write a book that is applicable to any living human being, its universal and no matter what part of the world you live, you still have a 100% reference in YOUR life to any event described in the book.

    • @ayushsadotra9426
      @ayushsadotra9426 Před 4 lety +4

      @@alexlalex5223 True! Its universal & timeless

    • @hh-zm9gr
      @hh-zm9gr Před 3 lety

      @@alexlalex5223 I know one more book that would apply to your life no matter what your situation currently be. And it is 7 times larger than tolstoy's "War and Peace".
      A book that could tell about how life happens, how wars are won, how is politics played, and how does society change. How do men become gods and gods become humans. How are countries made and how do they perish. How do differences in societies change over time. What is death and what is life? What is right and what is wrong.
      Yet, when you reach the end of the book, you are left with questions and more questions, but not answers.

    • @MA6O
      @MA6O Před 11 měsíci

      @@hh-zm9gr What's the book?

  • @abbywebb2845
    @abbywebb2845 Před 6 lety +67

    I love how the Great Comet of 1812 is just casually playing in the background

    • @messupd
      @messupd Před 4 lety

      What song was this?

    • @me_myselfand_i2099
      @me_myselfand_i2099 Před 4 lety +1

      @@messupd it sounds a bit like prologue at some parts i'm honestly not sure.

    • @abbysmith5382
      @abbysmith5382 Před 3 lety +2

      the song in the background isn't from the great comet at all, but i will say it does sound a little like the intro to 'letters' at some points.

  • @rogersledz6793
    @rogersledz6793 Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!

  • @kytiladdy
    @kytiladdy Před 3 lety +4

    I bought this book before the pandemic in Paris, at the Dôme des invalides. I haven't finished it yet but after like 400 pages this masterpiece finally managed to enchant me

  • @Ruhen02
    @Ruhen02 Před 4 lety +127

    I finished it today, and let me tell you, it's totally worth it.

    • @jboyd9062
      @jboyd9062 Před rokem +1

      Javier marias your face tomorrow

    • @Ratchet2431
      @Ratchet2431 Před rokem

      @@nekhlioudovbolkonsky2901 Don Quixote, obviously.

  • @mieliav
    @mieliav Před 4 lety +82

    when I was younger, I read W&P every year or two. no two readings were the same. now I usually wait a few more years in between readings. only once, I skipped all the battles. I've still got my original copy and I waited nearly a decade this time - half the joy now is the expectation 'what will I discover this time?' - W&P has never disappointed me. (I do this w/ a few of shakespeare's plays too, less consistently.) I did want to learn russian so I could read it in the original, but never found the right teacher (russians have a very different take on learning languages than I!

    • @anthonybrechbill
      @anthonybrechbill Před 4 lety +6

      Same, I read the thing last year and thought it was amazing. Now I've read it again this year and it strikes me totally differently. There is just so much good stuff in it.

    • @joydevsarkar4474
      @joydevsarkar4474 Před 4 lety +2

      A classy man

    • @observeirene
      @observeirene Před 4 lety +4

      I re-read classics at well! You really do notice different things each time ;)

    • @user-yf5qw3kb2r
      @user-yf5qw3kb2r Před 4 lety +2

      I can teach you Russian if you would like :)

    • @mieliav
      @mieliav Před 4 lety +1

      @@user-yf5qw3kb2r very sweet of you to offer!

  • @quickenglish4350
    @quickenglish4350 Před rokem

    Good job. We want more such videos and playlist.

  • @michaelcortez1531
    @michaelcortez1531 Před 3 lety +4

    Greatest novel ever, read it three times, will eagerly read it again.

  • @comsatteur6893
    @comsatteur6893 Před 7 lety +295

    watched this video partly due to my obsession to natasha, pierre and the great comet of 1812 musical but i will now totally read this book

  • @MrKikiGaby
    @MrKikiGaby Před 7 lety +488

    The piano in this video is so soothing, does anyone have the name of the music?

    • @real6882
      @real6882 Před 7 lety +14

      I am not sure but I think the first one is My Country by the Red Army.

    • @cw442
      @cw442 Před 7 lety +5

      Replying also for the same reason

    • @zamojamal7305
      @zamojamal7305 Před 7 lety +1

      .

    • @baso4nacl581
      @baso4nacl581 Před 7 lety +1

      Carl Wright same

    • @bobostyle1996
      @bobostyle1996 Před 7 lety +132

      After a long search, I found it!
      It's darude-sandstorm

  • @williamsteph2104
    @williamsteph2104 Před 2 lety

    This series should never have stopped

  • @lemonteeaaal
    @lemonteeaaal Před 3 lety

    the voice is so calming

  • @PopoSimTalia
    @PopoSimTalia Před 7 lety +816

    The first 7 Harry Potter books have over a million words, while War and Peace is around half a million. ;) So go read it, its not that big.

    • @MetallicReg
      @MetallicReg Před 7 lety +368

      You can't compare the emptiness of Rowling's writing style with Tolstoi.
      Harry Potter is nice for children to show them how easy it can be to read something. War and Peace is an adult piece of art to question your accumulated perception of life and history.
      A one-time completion of War and Peace can be equaled to over 5 times all novels of Rowling together in terms of focus needed.

    • @MetallicReg
      @MetallicReg Před 7 lety +42

      Illidan Stormrage
      Remarkable rhetorical work, Illidan. This is what your mother hoped would develop out of her offspring.
      To help out your simple mind: Your initial mindset does not fit here - the book can't change that.
      When you have grown a pair, you are free to return and try another read.

    • @PopoSimTalia
      @PopoSimTalia Před 7 lety +65

      I didn't see people complain about the serious style it was written in, but only about how big it is. So I am telling what is bigger. I personally like Russian writers.

    • @alexnickolaev
      @alexnickolaev Před 7 lety +2

      PopoSimTalia those are different words though ahah

    • @ashem05
      @ashem05 Před 7 lety +71

      There are only seven Harry Potter books. _The Cursed Attempt to Capitalize off the Success of the Harry Potter Franchise_ is a play.

  • @jekijan
    @jekijan Před 7 lety +1494

    Думаю здесь много рускоязычных)

    • @kalmaved
      @kalmaved Před 7 lety +114

      Всегда приятно видеть становление России всё более светской страной :-) хотя бы на примере того, что люди становятся более восприимчивыми к контенту на международном языке.

    • @MariannaK9
      @MariannaK9 Před 7 lety +25

      Глобализация радует с:

    • @MedvedPrevedPoka
      @MedvedPrevedPoka Před 7 lety +60

      Kalmaved , кажется, что эти вещи не имеют прямой связи, ведь светское государство - это отделение гос-ва от церкви и отсутствие гос. религии, при этом доля знающих иностранный язык может быть вполне велика.

    • @kalmaved
      @kalmaved Před 7 lety +30

      *Medved4tube*, согласен, неправильно употребил слово :-) имел в виду «не замкнутой на себе».

    • @Scorpionwacom
      @Scorpionwacom Před 7 lety +62

      Современному читателю будет очень трудно понять «Войну и мир». Надо много знать об эпохе, о культуре и об истории, чтобы начать отличать вкрапления исторических событий от вымысла автора. Без комментариев знающих людей даже мы с вами, соратники, полностью теряемся в тексте, потому что попадаем в непонятный мир. Что уж говорить о наших англоязычных коллегах. Я не стесняюсь признаться, что понял очень и очень мало, потому что плохо знаком с тем миром, который описывает Толстой. Мне не понятны мотивы, мировоззрение персонажей и отношение автора к происходящему. Я живу в 21 веке, моюсь каждый день и не понимаю, почему Толстому не по нраву, что Наполеон мылся и следил за собой. Запомнилась одна интересная мысль: быстрой связи не было, и военачальнику тех времён приходилось работать с устаревшей информацией. Интересная головоломка - по обрывочным запаздывающим донесениям достроить в голове модель происходящего, спрогнозировать события и отдать команды, которые повысят исход сражения. Разумеется, интересно это до тех пор, пока не вспомнишь, что речь идёт не о математической задаче, а о людях, погибающих в страшных муках непонятно за что.
      Наверняка понимающий человек откроет в романе что-то увлекательное. Я же скучал, считал страницы до конца и хотел, чтобы этот туман скорее прошёл. Если вы плохо знакомы с историей начала 19 века и мало знаете об обычиях тех времён, не мучайте себя этим трудом. И главное! Толстой - не историк. Эта работа - вольная интерпретация автора в угоду художественному замыслу, а не точное описание того, что произошло.

  • @evelinharmannfan7191
    @evelinharmannfan7191 Před rokem +2

    It also contains some of the first descriptions of depression, psychological consequences of trauma, a death march, and the unconcious and unvoluntary reenactment of family behavioural patterns. The psychological observations of Tolstoi precede those of Dr.Freud, but in my estamation often surpass them in accuracy.

  • @zamasuawaken1908
    @zamasuawaken1908 Před 3 lety +35

    This guy is like me when i need to complete a writing for school. I start with the clear object of the writing and i end up writing everything around it except the actual part itself lol

  • @giorgimerabishvili8194
    @giorgimerabishvili8194 Před 7 lety +85

    Thanks for the great video! I've just finished 'War and Peace' and it totally overwhelmed me! The best experience which I've ever had!

    • @9888565407
      @9888565407 Před 4 lety +5

      How much time does it take

    • @kamiljimenez272
      @kamiljimenez272 Před 4 lety

      @@9888565407 Years.

    • @zahidaakhter6440
      @zahidaakhter6440 Před 4 lety

      @@kamiljimenez272 You've read it?

    • @kamiljimenez272
      @kamiljimenez272 Před 4 lety

      @@zahidaakhter6440 It was kidding. Not exactly, but I have a friend that take it months D:

    • @margo9694
      @margo9694 Před 4 lety +1

      @@9888565407 it took me abt two weeks of almost non-stop reading but I'm Russian so maybe it's easier for me

  • @machouchacha
    @machouchacha Před 7 lety +2266

    A great video! It's a pity you missed one very important fact - "War and Peace" is in fact a wrong translation of the original Russian title of the book: "Voina i Mir". Have you noticed how there is nothing about "peace" in the book? That's because the Russian word "Mir" can mean two things - "peace" ... and "world". At Tolstoy's times, those two words were pronounced the same but written differently to help keep them apart. However, by the time first translations of the book were made, the distinction between the two written version had been dropped. So the first translators erroneously chose the wrong meaning of the word "Mir" and the error has been continuously perpetuated ever since. The real title "War and the world" makes much more sense, don't you think? :)

    • @cogoid
      @cogoid Před 7 lety +489

      It is known that Tolstoy specifically meant *"peace"* not *"society"*. At his time, the words had different spelling in Russian: *"миръ"* =peace, *"міръ"*=world. Tolstoy used the first one. There is some argument about typos in the early editions, but Tolstoy also used very unambiguous french translation _"La guerre et la paix."_ which can only be translated as "War and peace." But you are right, the book is gloomy.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před 7 lety +34

      Yes, because Russia is the embodiment of peace in our increasingly turbulent times.

    • @user-uv4xc6by6u
      @user-uv4xc6by6u Před 7 lety +40

      Not necessarily, interesting point but I don't thing your right, peace is also a very important aspect of в&м, and that is where a lot of the plot is centred around, life, prosperity, functioning in society, goals, personality, expectations, reality, death, anomie, etc

    • @rintaromoon8640
      @rintaromoon8640 Před 7 lety +29

      you are wrong. yes, in tolstoy's times the word 'mir' also meant 'world', but in a different way. 'world' was an equivalent to people, community. here's one example - 'на миру и смерть красна' (misfortunes are easier to bear when a person is with people who share a similar fate). when tolstoy sent his book to the publisher, the title was 'war and peace', but somebody misspelled it and the book was published as 'war and world' (= people). tolstoy accepted that and didn't argue about it

    • @ilyapetoushkoff8362
      @ilyapetoushkoff8362 Před 7 lety +38

      The legend is popular (even today!) yet totally incorrect.
      Tolstoy used the correct spelling for the meaning 'peace'.
      It is just nobody actually had a look into the original edition of 1869 (as well as multiple editions that followed).

  • @ishanvidyarthi7340
    @ishanvidyarthi7340 Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I'll start this book, it would feel just as beautiful as this video♥️

  • @SamxHardscoperx
    @SamxHardscoperx Před 3 lety +3

    Finally starting it tonight, and I’m so excited. I have had such high expectations of it, that I’ve had hundreds of books I planned on reading beforehand. But I realized that as that list keeps growing and growing, if I don’t just throw my hands up and finally deep dive into it, then I’ll never read it. So excited for this. If I can finish in about three weeks, I’ll be satisfied.

    • @SamxHardscoperx
      @SamxHardscoperx Před 3 lety +1

      Finally able to come back to my comment and say I finished it!!! I LOVED it so much. I expect to be re-reading it every year for the rest of my life

    • @neoarmstrongcyclonejetarms9326
      @neoarmstrongcyclonejetarms9326 Před 3 lety

      Who translated the book you were reading?

  • @LTProductionsInc
    @LTProductionsInc Před 7 lety +75

    Anna Karenina is my favorite book ever but War and Peace is almost as good. It helps me through hard times.

  • @baysike
    @baysike Před 7 lety +1874

    As a Russian I've read this in original, trust me, you can pick up Russian girls with this book, just say "I've read War and Peace"

    • @sommikoone6745
      @sommikoone6745 Před 6 lety +126

      Боюсь не склеишь так уже)

    • @lruvim_2092
      @lruvim_2092 Před 6 lety +54

      Да, современных девушек так точно не склеишь ты прав)

    • @danielkron2513
      @danielkron2513 Před 6 lety +206

      And boys too 🌈

    • @mikazen3724
      @mikazen3724 Před 6 lety +30

      Danil Kron lol

    • @polinadenisova8665
      @polinadenisova8665 Před 6 lety +89

      no you can't. Everyone reads it in school.

  • @cgo225
    @cgo225 Před 3 měsíci

    I'm reading War and Peace right now, and loving it. The quality of the writing, the characters, the dialogue, the historical sweep which dovetail perfectly with the detailed personal lives of so many fascinating characters..... I've read many classics but for my part, this is looking like the perfect novel.
    Yes, it's a big read, but once you've engaged with it then you don't want it to end - it's not a mere novel, it's a journey,multiple journeys, a morality tale, a mixture of fascinating tales of love, war and tragedy.....while you're reading this book, you constantly gasp at this author's genius.... Highly recommended

  • @matiasbais1183
    @matiasbais1183 Před 2 lety +8

    Por fin hoy pude terminar de leer esta gran ( a mi parecer ) novela de Tolstoi. Tiene una historia maginifica. El autor le da ese toque a todas sus paginas en la que abundan la experiencia que tiene en la vida y como se las ingenia para darle vida hasta el mas insignificante personaje. Muy agrandable de leer. Solo fue complicado el final, loa ultimos capitulos son un desafio. Aliento a todo el que quiera y este dispuesto a regalarse esta gran aventura de conocer Rusia, redactado por un gran prolifico escritor. Saludos y adelante!!! Desde Buenos Aires Argentina. Toltsoi. Un grande para estudiar y deleitarse. No faltará en mi futura biblioteca!!!!

  • @baganzabaganza2826
    @baganzabaganza2826 Před 4 lety +82

    I ve read this book 4 times, new feelings every time,

  • @bhuwanchand4211
    @bhuwanchand4211 Před 6 lety +111

    The narrator mistakes Pierre for Anatole. Natasha was in love with Anatole and Andrew at the same time. She conclusively started loving Pierre much later.

    • @alt-monarchist
      @alt-monarchist Před 6 lety +4

      Bhuwan Chand She fell in love with the guy who got friendzoned lol

    • @milamilavich8417
      @milamilavich8417 Před 6 lety +32

      Bhuwan Chand : Natasha wasn't in love with Anatole, it was just minute infatuation bcs of boredom (as André was away), bcs she'd been very badly received by Prince Bolkonsky senior, André's father (who was against their marriage as his pride was enormous), bcs she was very only 17years old and Anatole seemed very charmin, and few other causes.

    • @Cortesevasive
      @Cortesevasive Před 4 lety +1

      @@milamilavich8417 Thats what love is, if its logical and calculated it aint it.

    • @yeanahman2823
      @yeanahman2823 Před 4 lety +3

      Natasha doesn't understand love upto where I've read the book so far. She confuses it with admiration and is more infatuated with the idea of it than the real thing. (I'm a third of the way in) very realistic characters like the epic voiceover guy said.

    • @anastasiiaiurkova8897
      @anastasiiaiurkova8897 Před 4 lety +4

      @@yeanahman2823 Natasha truly loved Andrei, but what did he expect leaving a young unexperienced in love girl FOR A YEAR without answering any letters. She even thought that he will never marry her.

  • @karneko4531
    @karneko4531 Před rokem +8

    I really enjoyed the book and didn't find it boring at all. The characters and situations are very realistic. And the questions discussed in the book are relevant to this day. (Sorry for my english, i'm from Russia).

  • @RahulSrivastav844
    @RahulSrivastav844 Před 3 lety +1

    I finally finished it, huh man what a long and beautiful journey it was 💖

  • @aniekes3861
    @aniekes3861 Před 5 lety +19

    Stares at War & Peace on the book shelf.
    "Don't look at me like that!"

  • @zxz8443
    @zxz8443 Před 7 lety +108

    I remember seeing this book when I was six in the public library and thinking how many years would it take to finish

    • @daylacro9733
      @daylacro9733 Před 5 lety +6

      I finished IT a week and the differences are like 50-40 pages!

  • @user-lp2uy5fz3h
    @user-lp2uy5fz3h Před rokem +1

    The art is amazing...

  • @Adrian_Nel
    @Adrian_Nel Před 3 lety +8

    I don't think I'll ever finish the book - I could scarcely finish this video.

  • @brandonhernandez371
    @brandonhernandez371 Před 7 lety +790

    there was a mini series made on BBC and it was very good

    • @kilodey24
      @kilodey24 Před 7 lety +5

      Brandon Hernandez I saw it too

    • @dellsantiago8108
      @dellsantiago8108 Před 7 lety

      Brandon Hernandez can i watch it here in youtube

    • @adrianazashen
      @adrianazashen Před 7 lety +66

      It's the mini series that got me interested to read the book 🙂

    • @MattDW45
      @MattDW45 Před 7 lety +3

      It's only available on Netflix or DVD right now- It only came out last year!

    • @MrBlazingbanana
      @MrBlazingbanana Před 7 lety +4

      any one know the name?

  • @frbmp5100
    @frbmp5100 Před 4 lety +1717

    Imagine if Tolstoy had Twitter. Only Trump can match his productivity.

  • @fishjj76
    @fishjj76 Před rokem

    When I read this book I did it by committing myself to reading 10 pages a day every day. I worked out that if I stuck to that pace I would finish in six months. I finished reading the book sooner than that because the content drew me in. It is a great read. Once you start you'll love it. Once you finish you'll be glad you read it.

  • @jeronimodeltoro9572
    @jeronimodeltoro9572 Před 3 lety

    saw this video bout 3 months ago, just read it, loved it

  • @ericastevens614
    @ericastevens614 Před 6 lety +229

    I just want to read it because of Natasha, Pierre and the great comet of 1812

    • @yyxychorell
      @yyxychorell Před 6 lety +7

      Erica Stevens Same

    • @elias2729
      @elias2729 Před 6 lety +5

      Erica Stevens relatable

    • @Udontkno7
      @Udontkno7 Před 6 lety +3

      Tbh

    • @goatshenanigans6090
      @goatshenanigans6090 Před 4 lety +3

      NATASHAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaa 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶

    • @ctrlgate
      @ctrlgate Před 4 lety +1

      Have I missed something? What is it?
      UPD: oh, I see, sounds nice 😀

  • @free_rad
    @free_rad Před 4 lety +30

    It was in my school’s summer recommended literature list and i read all 4 volumes when i was 15. It was the only book i read during that summer.

  • @giants2k8
    @giants2k8 Před 3 lety +7

    I only have 48 pages left to read. What a truly magnificent book by an extraordinary writer.
    The book blurs the lines somewhat at times, because the world and real events are portrayed so accurately. That you feel like these characters lived through the period. They are so well developed and flawed characters.
    I can see why Tolstoy didn’t class it as a novel though, because it is more of an experience than anything. From deep philosophical themes to the futility of war and man’s influence on historical events.
    You really feel like you know the countless characters in the book and you can feel their joy, pain, sorrow, ecstasy and experience their peaks and valleys.
    I loved it and was surprised at how easy it was to read, especially after the first 100 pages. I can’t believe how quickly I read it. Well I haven’t completed just yet. I still have those final 48 pages.
    For me, War and Peace is right up their with Crime and Punishment.

    • @IndiDaddiii
      @IndiDaddiii Před 4 měsíci

      How many decades exactly did it take you to complete your reading of War and Peace?

    • @giants2k8
      @giants2k8 Před 4 měsíci

      @@IndiDaddiii Hahaha, trust me it is deceptively easy to get through once you get into the flow and rhythm of it. It’s arguably my favorite book of all-time. Russian literature is just so deep and unique.

    • @IndiDaddiii
      @IndiDaddiii Před 4 měsíci

      @giants2k8 I am surprised that you responded.
      And yes, Russian literature is magnificently eccentric. Currently, I am thinking of reading Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky. These types of books have some strange charm. Do you know any more of these books?

    • @giants2k8
      @giants2k8 Před 4 měsíci

      @@IndiDaddiii You should most definitely read Crime and Punishment, it is a superb novel and a master class. The themes of nihilism, conscience and free will, guilt and morality are unlike anything else tbh.
      I’d recommend The Brothers Karamazov, Anna Karenina, The Master and Margarita, Dead Souls, Doctor Zhivago, Heart of a Dog and A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. Russian literature explores a wide array of different themes and they are just so profound.

    • @IndiDaddiii
      @IndiDaddiii Před 4 měsíci

      @giants2k8 yep, Russian literature is gloom yet rejuvenating. As in a dark and drab room, an extinguished candle seeking burning tears of pain to light up.
      A prison where wisdom lurks but futility conjures the minds in illusions of materials. Exploring rawest human emotions and blatant bold truths of fake world without a facade.
      Definitely, I have read some of these and will certainly read your suggestions. Thanks

  • @peterrabit4850
    @peterrabit4850 Před 2 lety

    Currently reading it. I'm on chapter 3 and am already enjoying it.

  • @cristalcruz1959
    @cristalcruz1959 Před 4 lety +114

    If Charlie Brown made his book report over it, so can I.

  • @Sunny198325
    @Sunny198325 Před 4 lety +27

    Tolstoy immersed himself in his and Russia's past and gave literary master piece. Not many can keep pondering into past without going into depression.

  • @elizabethyoskova
    @elizabethyoskova Před 3 lety +10

    This book literally changed my life for real .

    • @pawelpawlowin95
      @pawelpawlowin95 Před 3 lety

      How??

    • @elizabethyoskova
      @elizabethyoskova Před 3 lety +1

      @@pawelpawlowin95 there's so much psychology involved, after reading it, it changed the way I see the world and myself. I can say that I am a different person now. It was like rediscovering myself.

  • @vladables169
    @vladables169 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I remember reading this when I was 15, took me almost 3 months to finish it. I remember it as the story of several couples and their tragedies and triumphs. I think I'm going to read it again.

  • @blackjack5293
    @blackjack5293 Před 5 lety +9

    I Have read War and Peace 13 times! I read it profusely in my early twenties, because it's such an enjoyable read. If big books daunt you, try associating characters with a familiar face you enjoyed seeing in famous movies. Prince Vasili - Patrick Stewart. "Captain Picard Next Gen"
    Pierre Buzukhov - a 20 something Mel Gibson "Lethal Weapon, Braveheart"
    Andrei Bolkonsky - Cary Elwes, "Princess Bride".
    Nikolia Rostov - 20 something Keanu Reeves
    - Dolokhov Rutger Hauer, "Blade Runner"

  • @BigGulpsHuhh
    @BigGulpsHuhh Před 7 lety +162

    Although one wonders if War and Peace would have been as highly acclaimed as it was, had it been published under its original title War, What Is It Good For.

    • @TheXXXStrikeXXXX
      @TheXXXStrikeXXXX Před 7 lety +13

      Jonathan Davies hahahah hoping someone would say this

    • @spineshivers
      @spineshivers Před 7 lety +13

      Jonathan Davies Ah, the Seinfeld joke. I've been waiting for this one.

    • @vadimpm1290
      @vadimpm1290 Před 7 lety +7

      now seinfield spines and shivers in the grave

    • @C_mao
      @C_mao Před 6 lety +12

      "Absolutely Nuh-thaaan !"

    • @kozhikkaalan
      @kozhikkaalan Před 6 lety +1

      Hahahahhaha

  • @fahadbinnazir5314
    @fahadbinnazir5314 Před 2 lety

    background piano sound is so soothing!

  • @abbaszaidi8371
    @abbaszaidi8371 Před 3 lety

    I’m 45 years old and only recently learned of Tsar Alexander I and everything else. I think I need to read this tome. I think it’s come along at the right time in my life