Solzhenitsyn, 20th-century oracle, dies

Brother None

This ghoul has seen it all
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A sad day (and finally an author dies that I actually knew was still alive)

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, whose stubborn, lonely and combative literary struggles gained the force of prophecy as he revealed the heavy afflictions of Soviet Communism in some of the most powerful literary works of the 20th century, died late on Sunday at the age of 89 in Moscow. His son Yermolai said the cause was a heart ailment.

Solzhenitsyn outlived by nearly 17 years the Soviet state and system he had battled through years of imprisonment, ostracism and exile.

Solzhenitsyn had been an obscure, middle-aged, unpublished high school science teacher in a provincial Russian town when he burst onto the literary stage in 1962 with "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich." The book, a mold-breaking novel about a prison camp inmate, was a sensation. Suddenly he was being compared to giants of Russian literature like Tolstoy, Dostoyevski and Chekov.

Over the next five decades, Solzhenitsyn's fame spread throughout the world as he drew upon his experiences of totalitarian duress to write evocative novels like "The First Circle" and "The Cancer Ward" and historical works like "The Gulag Archipelago."

"Gulag" was a monumental account of the Soviet labor camp system, a chain of prisons that by Solzhenitsyn's calculation some 60 million people had entered during the 20th century. The book led to his expulsion from his native land. George Kennan, the American diplomat, described it as "the greatest and most powerful single indictment of a political regime ever to be leveled in modern times."

Solzhenitsyn was the last of the true Russian prophet-writers, the like of which have yet to resurface.

"Funny", as I had just finished reading August 1914. It's like a War and Peace but slightly less good. Now the Red Wheel will never finish its revolutions.
 
Gulag Archipeligo I & II are the most powerful books I've ever read. If he didn't have such a dark sense of humor, I'd have slit my wrists. I read them while taking a class on Stalininsm. Soul crushing.
 
I could never get through the Gulag Archipelo. It's like reading Winston Churchill's World War II. Powerful stuff and all, but such a mind-killer.

Cancer Ward is one of the greatest novels I have ever read, tho'.
 
I was a fan, for sure.

I have The First Circle sitting on my shelf waiting to be read. It'll be bumped up on my list now, I think.
 
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