silverseason
New Member
My copy is a paperback with an English translation by Thomas P. Whitney, copyright 1968. Is anyone reading this in Russian?
I am 50 pages in (through Chapter 9) and find I am in the hands of a story-teller with a firm touch. He sets the problem in the first chapter with a frustrated attempt to use a public telephone to warn a possible victim of the system. We know instinctively that this is going to go wrong.
Then we jump in Chapter 2 into the sharashka, the special prison where scientists and technicians work on secret projects. Solzhenitsyn uses a whirl of dialog to develop the various characters. Already I am alert to the committed communist Rubin who says "What must be, must be. The state can't exist without a well-organized prison system." But is he sincere or ironic? In context, the statement can be read either way.
Nerzhin, the mathematician, is also interesting. My first impression is of someone who is relentlessly analytical, as he compares the prose - and intellectual styles - of Lenin and Stalin. Then another dimension appears in his interview with his old professor who want to recruit him for a cryptology project. The professor offers that if the work is successful Nerzhin will be forgiven and given his freedom. The response:
"You're beginning at the wrong end. Let them admit first that it's not right to put people in prison for their way of thinking, and then we will decide whether we will forgive them."
Building a long novel with many characters and story threads is a skill I admire. So far, this one is the equal of Dickens or Tolstoy or George Eliot.
I am 50 pages in (through Chapter 9) and find I am in the hands of a story-teller with a firm touch. He sets the problem in the first chapter with a frustrated attempt to use a public telephone to warn a possible victim of the system. We know instinctively that this is going to go wrong.
Then we jump in Chapter 2 into the sharashka, the special prison where scientists and technicians work on secret projects. Solzhenitsyn uses a whirl of dialog to develop the various characters. Already I am alert to the committed communist Rubin who says "What must be, must be. The state can't exist without a well-organized prison system." But is he sincere or ironic? In context, the statement can be read either way.
Nerzhin, the mathematician, is also interesting. My first impression is of someone who is relentlessly analytical, as he compares the prose - and intellectual styles - of Lenin and Stalin. Then another dimension appears in his interview with his old professor who want to recruit him for a cryptology project. The professor offers that if the work is successful Nerzhin will be forgiven and given his freedom. The response:
"You're beginning at the wrong end. Let them admit first that it's not right to put people in prison for their way of thinking, and then we will decide whether we will forgive them."
Building a long novel with many characters and story threads is a skill I admire. So far, this one is the equal of Dickens or Tolstoy or George Eliot.