Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Fellow Russia Should Eternally Be Proud Of

Who does not know Leo Tolstoy or his famous masterpieces such as "Anna Karenina" and "War and Peace?" I am a Leo Tolstoy fan and I think it is a big disgrace talking about his country but keeping mum about this great Russian disciple of the written art. But more than being a mighty novelist, Leo proved his intellectual creativity by being a philosopher, essayist, educational revolutionizer, and moral thinker.

Leo was a member of one of the modest aristocrat families in Russia; that being said, he was predictably a rich young man. However, at a very raw age, his parents passed away and he went under the protection of an aunt. During his more immature years, he went away from his university and took pure control of his peasants. Later, he made a salient entry to the literary world and was then celebrated for being among the most promising geniuses.

Leo lived almost the totality of his existence seeking life's lucidity. This was plain in his two most famed novels "Anna Karenina" and "War and Peace;" both are hailed as the greatest and most irreproachably written literary pieces. What he got after the two publications was an immeasurable accolade from his generation and the present time primarily for writing so realistically, almost baring the skeleton of Russia's society.

Leo's novel themes are so universal that even nowadays, his works are commonly usually read and studied in every corner of the globe. His craft is unsurpassed that he must be among the greatest literary masters who ever occured.

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