Doctor Zhivago

Front Cover
Pantheon Books, 1991 - Fiction - 558 pages
It is the story of Zhivago, poet and physician, and his struggle to keep his family alive in the midst of the overwhelming chaos of the Russian Revolution. And, it is about Zhivago's love for the beautiful Lara, the woman he pursues beyond all reason, the human symbol of life's sweetness and joy....
 

Selected pages

Contents

The Fiveoclock Express
3
Farewell to the
131
The Moscow Encampment
166
Train to the Urals
215
Arrival
267
Varykino
277
The Highway
301
The Forest Brotherhood
329
The Rowan Tree
352
Opposite the House of Sculptures
376
Return to Varykino
419
Conclusion
501
Copyright

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About the author (1991)

BORIS Leonidovich PASTERNAK won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958 "for his important achievement both in contemporary lyrical poetry and in the field of the great Russian epic tradition.” — the Nobel Prize committee. Pasternak had to decline the honor because of the protests in his home country. Doctor Zhivago became an international bestseller and was translated into 18 languages but circulated only in secrecy and translation in Russia. In 1987 the Union of Soviet Writers posthumously reinstated Pasternak, a move that gave his works a legitimacy they had lacked in the Soviet Union since his expulsion from the writers' union in 1958 and that finally made possible the publication of Doctor Zhivago in the Soviet Union. Pasternak's son accepted his father's Nobel Prize medal at a ceremony in Stockholm in 1989.

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