The Death of Ivan Ilych
The Death of Ivan Ilych
Book of the Month
The Death of Ivan Ilych
Leo Tolstoy
Melville House, 106 pages
Written eight years after the publication of Anna Karenina—a time during
which, despite the global success of his novels, Leo Tolstoy renounced fiction
in favor of religious and philosophical tracts—The Death of Ivan Ilych represents
perhaps the most keenly realized melding of Tolstoy’s spirituality with his
artistic skills.
Here in a vibrant new translation, the tale of a judge who slowly comes to
understand that his illness is fatal was inspired by Tolstoy’s observation at
his local train station of hundreds of shackled prisoners being sent off to
Siberia, many for petty crimes. When he learned that the sentencing judge had
died, Tolstoy was roused to consider the judge’s thoughts during his final
days—a study on the acceptance of mortality only deepened by the death, during
its writing, of one of Tolstoy’s own young children.
The final result is a magisterial story, both chilling and beguiling in the
fullness of its empathy, its quotidian detail, and the beauty of its prose, and
is, as many have claimed it to be, one of the most moving novellas ever
written.
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