War and Peace, Volume 1

Front Cover
Penguin, 1982 - Fiction - 1443 pages
The novel opens with the aristocrats discussing the notion of war at a sumptuous party, an early indication of troubles ahead. Napoleon's invasion of Russia rocks the nation, but Tolstoy's concern is primarily with the personal crisis created. Centring around the joys and misfortunes of the Rostov family, he weaves a web of diverse, colourful characters; among them Pierre Bezukhov, vacillating between Freemasonry, philanthropy and mysticism in his desperate search for truth, the beautiful heroine Natasha, full of lively spontaneity, and the tragically disillusioned Andrei Bolkhonsky. War and Peace is a magnificient achievement, blending the historical, social, moral, psychological and personal in its broad depiction of human insight and experience.
 

Contents

I
II
1
III
3
IV
125
V
231
VI
343
VII
345
VIII
406
XIII
810
XIV
974
XV
1105
XVI
1107
XVII
1168
XVIII
1220
XIX
1273
XX
1337

IX
490
X
574
XI
632
XII
713
XXI
1339
XXII
1400
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