Anna Karenina (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) FROM OUR EDITORS
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
Vladimir Nabokov called Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina
“one of the greatest love stories in world literature.”
Matthew Arnold claimed it was not so much a work of art as “a piece
of life.” Set in imperial Russia, Anna Karenina is a rich
and complex meditation on passionate love and disastrous infidelity.
Married to a powerful government minister, Anna Karenina is a beautiful
woman who falls deeply in love with a wealthy army officer, the elegant
Count Vronsky. Desperate to find truth and meaning in her life, she
rashly defies the conventions of Russian society and leaves her husband
and son to live with her lover. Condemned and ostracized by her peers and
prone to fits of jealousy that alienate Vronsky, Anna finds herself
unable to escape an increasingly hopeless situation.
Set against this tragic affair is the story of Konstantin Levin, a
melancholy landowner whom Tolstoy based largely on himself. While Anna
looks for happiness through love, Levin embarks on his own search for
spiritual fulfillment through marriage, family, and hard work.
Surrounding these two central plot threads are dozens of characters whom
Tolstoy seamlessly weaves together, creating a breathtaking tapestry of
nineteenth-century Russian society.
From its famous opening sentence—“Happy families are all
alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way”—to its
stunningly tragic conclusion, this enduring tale of marriage and adultery
plumbs the very depths of the human soul.
Amy Mandelker, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at
the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, is the author of
Framing Anna Karenina: Tolstoy, the Woman Question, and the Victorian
Novel and coeditor of Approaches to Teaching Anna Karenina.