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Nobel Prize in Literature

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Dedicated to reading authors who have won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Who are you reading now, and what do you think of these movers and shakers in the world of literature?

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  • tapbirds

    Solzhenytsin is dead

    I assume you all heard the news? The world would be much poorer without his writing, IMHO. My favorite: Cancer Ward. Yours?

    Best wishes,
    Scott
    tapbirds started this discussion 1 year ago. ( reply )

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  • Jonas D

    Jonas D 

    I only read 'The First Circle' which I did like, and one day I will read the gulag books. Certainly the literary world lost a great profile ...
    posted 1 year ago. ( reply )
    show 1 reply
    • tapbirds

      tapbirds 

      If interested, I found this NY Time article to be an excellent, in-depth summary of Solzhenitsyn's life: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/04/books/04solzhenitsyn.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=solzhenitsyn&st=cse&oref=slogin#

      Regards, Scott
      posted 1 year ago. ( reply )
  • writingteacher

    writingteacher 

    "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich." I began the Gulag Archipelago but never finished it. He was one of the last great "writers," one whose life was his work and his work changed the world. Is any contemporary writer is equal?
    posted 1 year ago. ( reply )
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    • tapbirds

      tapbirds 

      In the NY Time article noted above (hopefully the link works!), I found it interesting that Solzhenitsyn originally had to commit "One Day" to memory in a Labor Camp by means of rosary beads made up of chewed bread pieces. The article noted, "each piece represented a passage that he would repeat to himself until he could say it without hesitation." Also fascinating was the interest that Khrushchev took in reading "One Day," and the role that both he and the book had in making Solzhenitsyn famous! Regards, Scott
      posted 1 year ago. ( reply )
  • Rita Z

    Rita Z 

    I didint read about his death..........A great..............yes.........

    posted 11 months ago. ( reply )
  • Linda S

    Linda S 

    And Rostropovich, his friend who gave him a place to live when he was expelled (he and his wife got to tour Siberia for 10 years for the favor), is also dead.

    Heard him once in NY, a great man indeed, who lived in good company.

    posted 11 months ago. ( reply )
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    • tapbirds

      tapbirds 

      Hi Linda:

      Thank you so much for your post! I never knew that Rostropovich had sheltered Solzhenitsyn in 1970 until I read your post. That really made the last two years of memorable deaths come alive for me!

      Thanks again,
      Scott

      posted 11 months ago. ( reply )
  • alvin r. c.

    alvin r. c. 

    I'm still reading Cancer Ward. Just 1/4 through, I'm finding it interesting. Also, I just got a copy of We Never Make Mistakes.

    posted 8 months ago. ( reply )
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    • tapbirds

      tapbirds 

      Hi Alvin:
      Hope you're enjoying Cancer Ward - - however I'm not sure if "enjoying" is the right word for this important novel.

      posted 8 months ago. ( reply )
  • alvin r. c.

    alvin r. c. 

    I know what you mean by 'enjoying." Quite the irony. Ha ha ha. But the writing is really something that fans of Solzhenitsyn will praise and 'enjoy."

    posted 7 months ago. ( reply )
  • Barbara M

    Barbara M 

    One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. A must read!!! Cancer Ward is excellent too.

    posted 7 months ago. ( reply )
  • alvin r. c.

    alvin r. c. 

    Cancer Ward is now one of my favorites. Some characters may be dying but every page is alive.

    posted 7 months ago. ( reply )
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