The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Short Stories

Front Cover
Courier Corporation, Oct 13, 1993 - Fiction - 140 pages
While "The Kreutzer Sonata" caused a public sensation, Tolstoy's wife, Sonya, was hurt and furious that he should have enriched his scathing indictment of marriage with private details from theri own life together. Tolstoy, during two years of obsessive unhappiness, had become convinced that the idea of a "Christian marriage" was an impossibility. Here he lets loose all his frustration and disgust at human sexuality, and the humiliating, ungodly, sensual tie that binds men to women. The curious result, part self-lacerating, confession, part Christian polemic, is moving, above all, as the story of a man whose sexual jealousy, inflamed by guilt, drives him to murder his wife.

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References to this book

Love & Eroticism
Mike Featherstone
Limited preview - 1999

About the author (1993)

Novelist, essayist, dramatist, and philosopher, Count Leo Tolstoy (1828 1910) is most famous for his sprawling portraits of 19th-century Russian life, as recounted in "Anna Karenina" and "War and Peace.""

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