2020/05/15

Nuclear 2.0: Why A Green Future Needs Nuclear Power, Lynas, Mark - Amazon.com

Nuclear 2.0: Why A Green Future Needs Nuclear Power, Lynas, Mark - Amazon.com



Nuclear 2.0: Why A Green Future Needs Nuclear Power Kindle Edition

by Mark Lynas (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition

4.6 out of 5 stars    152 ratings

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Everything you thought you knew about nuclear power is wrong. This is just as well, according to Mark Lynas in Nuclear 2.0, because nuclear energy is essential to avoid catastrophic global warming. Using the latest world energy statistics Lynas shows that with wind and solar still at only about 1 percent of global primary energy, asking renewables to deliver all the world’s power is “dangerously delusional”. Moreover, there is no possibility of using less energy, he reminds us, when the developing world is fast extricating itself from poverty and adding the equivalent of a new Brazil to global electricity consumption each year. The anti-nuclear movement of the 1970s and 80s succeeded only in making the world more dependent on fossil fuels, he shows: its history is “not lit by sunshine, but shrouded in coal smoke”. Instead of making the same mistake again, all those who want to see a low-carbon future need to join forces, he insists, concluding the book with an ambitious proposal for an Apollo Program-style combined investment in wind, solar and nuclear power. Mark Lynas is an environmental writer and campaigner. His previous books have drawn attention to the perils of global warming, and he was Climate Advisor to the President of the Maldives from 2009-2011. He is a Visiting Research Associate at Oxford University’s School of Geography and the Environment, and a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Emerging Technologies. He recently featured in the movie documentary Pandora’s Promise, which inspired the writing of this book.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Mark Lynas is an environmental writer and campaigner. He is a visiting research associate at Oxford University’s school of geography and the environment, and vice-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Emerging Technologies. He was the climate advisor to the president of the Maldives from 2009 to 2011 and is the author of The God Species, High Tide, and Six Degrees.



Review

"A passionate appeal to environmentalists to embrace all the tools available that can tackle climate change. This book deserves to be read." -- David MacKay FRS, Chief Scientific Advisor to the UK Department of Energy & Climate Change

Product details

File Size: 2430 KB

Print Length: 112 pages

Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited

Publication Date: November 22, 2014

Sold by: Amazon.com Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B00Q1TAOC8

Text-to-Speech: Enabled 

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Enabled 

Word Wise: Enabled

Lending: Not Enabled

Screen Reader: Supported 

Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled 

Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #720,174 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

#1314 in Energy Production & Extraction

#124 in Physics of Energy

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Martin H. Goodman

5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, highly accurate, very well presented

Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2015

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This is to date the single most complete, clear, and relatively concise treatment of the subject of nuclear power that I have read (and I've read a number of them). I highly recommend it to all... especially to those who still question whether nuclear power is as undeniably safe, clean, and economical as it in fact is. I found it to cover a remarkably full range of the important issues and facts and history, with great care and accuracy.



I've been an environmentalist, mountaineer, cyclist, and fighter for social justice and rational application of science and medicine all my life. I am strongly opposed to reliance of fossil fuel, which kills tens of thousands per year and rapes the environment generally (coal and oil and natural gas mining), in addition to the increasingly strongly documented role of CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuel in accelerating global warming. The child of two teachers, trained in science and medicine at Harvard, UCSD, and elsewhere I have a special appreciation of clear yet detailed communication. This book should be read by all. It helps dispel the many anti-nuclear myths, on by noe, clearly and factually, and also addresses the many myths regarding the false notion that "renewable" power is anything other than a proven failure when it comes to meeting most of our electricity needs, or displacing use of fossil fuel.



It is honest and straightforward.

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Christopher Paul Winter

5.0 out of 5 stars A pragmatic change of heart

Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2016

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In this slim book, Mark Lynas confesses his change of heart about nuclear power. Beginning as an anti-nuclear activist, in 2005 he reversed that position. It is worthwhile to consider the background against which his conversion took place.



At that time, the world had experienced two very disturbing nuclear accidents: Three Mile Island in 1979, and Chernobyl in 1986. The latter was far more serious in objective terms; 50 immediate deaths resulted, and Lynas reports that 6,000 children came down with thyroid cancer (but only 15 died.) Not a single death is conclusively linked to Three Mile Island.



There have been other nuclear accidents, of course. The worst since 2005 was Fukushima Daiichi, in which three reactor cores melted down after their plant was flooded by a tsunami in March 2011. Much radiation was released; but, again, no human death is linked to that radiation.



Meanwhile, some 100 nuclear plants in the U.S., and 400 worldwide, have been operating without major mishap for decades. This points up the arguments Mark Lynas makes in his book. They are a) that while nuclear has problems, it has compiled an impressive overall safety record, especially when compared to coal, and b) that despite the rapid progress in renewables like wind and solar, the case for bringing enough renewables on line in time to forestall the worst harm from climate change does not hold together. Pragmatically, then, if fossil fuels must be phased out ASAP and renewables cannot fully replace them soon enough, the only remaining option is nuclear.



Feel free to dispute my views, or the arguments Mark Lynas makes in this important book. That is how progress is made. But please base your dispute on facts. The matter is too urgent for smoke and mirrors.

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George D. Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars Don't give up on Nuclear.

Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2014

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Clear and cogent. Lynas dares to confront reality. Renewables are great but will probably not do the job. Nuclear is essential and should not be consigned to the dust bin despite Fukushima. New nuclear technology can solve many of the problems of waste and danger that exist with the existing fleet of reactors. Newer reactor designs can eat their own waste. They are a lot safer. Most nuclear reactors today are old and unsafe, and should be replaced with the newer technology. Please look up the Science Council for Global Initiative on the web for good basic information.

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VINE VOICE

4.0 out of 5 stars Nuclear Power in Perspective

Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2013

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Nuclear 2.0: Why a Green Future Needs Nuclear Power by Mark Lynas



"Nuclear 2.0" makes the compelling case that in order to resolve the global warming crisis; nuclear power must complement other low-carbon power sources. Environmentalist, Mark Lynas provides the readers with a succinct, accessible book that makes the strong case for nuclear power. Time and scientific evidence has converted the author from the anti-nuclear camp to a pro-renewable and pro-nuclear outlook. This stimulating 71-page includes the following unnumbered chapters: The Carbon Bomb, The Rise of the Rest, Coal reality, Fossil fantasies, The carbon challenge, Renewables revolution, Energetic denialism, Breaking the nuclear taboo, Nuclear and the environment, The anti-nuclear movement, A world safe for coal, Nuclear accidents, Fukushima health impacts, Radiation and reality, Chernobyl, Deaths per Terawatt-hour, The German Experiment, Next-generation: Nuclear 2.0, Too expensive? Solving climate change, and All of the Above.



Positives:

1. Well-researched, accessible and succinct book.

2. A very important topic handled with utmost care and deference. Lynas does a good job of avoiding falling into the proverbial alarmist well.

3. The book is full of facts, "In total, 1.4 billion people still do not have access to electricity today."

4. Makes the compelling case that maintaining an anti-nuclear ideology is both ill-conceived and fundamentally incompatible with resolving the climate change crisis.

5. While a lot of books of this ilk spend a lot of time on demonstrating the reality of global warming this one focuses more on how to address it through the use of nuclear power.

6. Makes it perfectly clear that there is a price to pay to improve global economic development and that requires more energy. "The world will burn around 1.3 billion more tons of coal per year by 2017 compared with today."

7. Debunks many misconceptions. "It is worth mentioning at this stage that there is no prospect whatsoever of us running out of coal - or indeed any other fossil fuel - in time to save the climate."

8. Complementing nuclear power with other sources of renewable energy (solar and wind).

9. Making clear what he does not support and why.

10. Does a wonderful job of educating the public on nuclear power. "Despite all the high emotion that nuclear power seems to cause, few people remember the rather prosaic fact that all a nuclear reactor does is generate heat."

11. Putting two of the most significant nuclear accidents in perspective (Chernobyl in 1986 and Fukushima in 2011). The health impacts.

12. Radiation and reality. "Coal-fired power stations in fact release far more radiation into the environment than nuclear power stations, due to trace radionuclides being concentrated into coal ash and blown away in dust and smoke."

13. The evolution of nuclear reactors. Improved standards of safety.

14. Solving climate change...the reality. "The conclusion is clear: if nuclear is removed from the picture, even the greatest imaginable investment in renewables reduces eventual global warming by at best a couple of tenths of a degree Celsius as compared to business as usual."

15. Provides footnotes.



Negatives:

1. Charts and graphs would have added value.

2. The author makes a compelling case for nuclear power but doesn't really delve into the question of whether or not we have the will as a planet to properly address it.

3. Footnotes are not properly linked.

4. The author mentions several books but there is no formal bibliography.



In summary, the author makes a succinct compelling case for nuclear power. Mark Lynas makes it perfectly clear that he is not against renewables; his main point is that it will require much more than solar and wind to supply enough power to a rapidly-growing globe and address climate change simultaneously. The case is irrefutable; it's a matter of whether or not we humans can address the issue of global warming in a timely and effective manner. Will we build enough nuclear power plants to properly address our increasing global demand in the best interest of our planet? A great Kindle value, I highly recommend it!



Further recommendations: "Energy for Future Presidents: The Science Behind the Headlines" by Richard A. Muller, "The Crash Course: The Unsustainable Future Of Our Economy, Energy, And Environment" by Chris Martenson, "Fool Me Twice: Fighting the Assault on Science in America" by Shawn Lawrence, "Warnings: The True Story of How Science Tamed the Weather" by Mike Smith, "The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches from the Front Lines" by Michael E. Mann, "Merchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Global Warming" by Naomi Oreskes & Erik M. Conway, "Lies, Damned Lies, and Science: How to Sort Through the Noise Around Global Warming, the Latest Health Claims, and Other Scientific Controversies (FT Press Science)" by Sherry Seethaler, "Clean Break: The Story of Germany's Energy Transformation and What Americans Can Learn from It (Kindle Single)" by Osha Gray Davidson, "Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity" by James Hansen, and "The Weather of the Future: Heat Waves, Extreme Storms, and Other Scenes from a Climate-Changed Planet" by Heidi Cullen.

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Bubba

5.0 out of 5 stars Why IS Nuclear such a dirty word?

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 9, 2013

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We cannot afford to turn away from the possibility of unlimited, cheap and carbon-emissions free energy without a full understanding of it and the issues connected to it. If James Hansen, the 'father' of climate change science, thinks it should be investigated as a possible solution for avoided the threatening carbon/climate disaster (see "Storms of my Grandchildren"), then it deserves a look. Or, to put it another way, how much do YOU really know about nuclear energy? Probably not as much as you could or should.



This is what Mark Lynas, a respected environmentalist author with a sound track record ("Six Degrees," for instance), has set out to do in this modest, as well as cheap, and easily accessible book, well aware that he might upset some of his colleagues on green issues. But this is what has to be done, in a no-stone-unturned approach to escaping climate change. While people like Harvey Wassermann scream hysterically from the roof-tops, Animal Farm-like, "Renewables good, nuclear bad," (and getting his "facts" muddled into the bargain) you may want to ask yourself how many people have died in accidents at nuclear power-plants, to see if the word "Nuclear" deserves its bad reputation. You may like to reflect that no-one died at Fukushima, no-one died at Three Mile Island. According to a list, compiled from multiple sources, in Wikipedia, the figure is less than 70 fatalities at the time of the accident, including Chernobyl, from 1952 to 2009. Meanwhile, last year 32,000 Americans died in car accidents. And we still drive cars.



This book shows how nuclear technology has moved on; the way we have made nuclear energy in the past has been incredibly inefficient (1% of the fuel's potential) and incredibly dirty, using so called slow neutrons in fission. Using fast neutrons - the Nuclear 2.0 of the title (although fast reactors have been around in experimental form since the 1950s) - you can stop mining Uranium as there is already enough in the world, you can reduce waste, you can actually burn waste (Hansen mentions an estimate of $50 trillion's worth waste already sitting around in the US that could be turned into fuel and turned from being waste) you can reduce weapons proliferation (what waste there is, is unsuitable to make weapons from.) You might be tempted to say, "What's not to like?"



"Nuclear" might just be the clean word we have been looking for. If renewables can't hack it - and, with the best will the world, as fast as we expand them, we are making life difficult by constantly increasing our per capita demand on top of an increasing population - at the very least this book gives an excellent and up-to-date picture of the current situation. Even if you don't agree, at least you will be better informed.

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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 stars research trumps emotion

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 10, 2014

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Should be required reading for all New Age activists.I cannot believe how defenceless even the most intelligent people are when their emotions are prioritised.

It is a great shame the Green Movement was hijacked by fanatics - as the Feminist Movement was perverted by implacable prejudice.

We have only one way to deal constructively with the world around us: the greatest achievement of the animal kingdom - SCIENCE! There is literally nothing else that WORKS.

Lesson: before you commit yourself, do the proper research. QED. As important is the absolute dominance of compromise - a word hated beyond reason by the very young and the over-committed! (and, needless to say, patriarchs and dictators and other super-salesmen). If you refuse to compromise, you will inevitably fall into the trap of doing exactly the opposite of what you originally intended...

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Mr. J. Preedy

5.0 out of 5 stars If you are passionate about averting climate change read this book!

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 18, 2014

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Mark Lynas was an anti-nuclear campaigner who had not examined the facts about nuclear power until at a conference he realized that it is the major source of carbon dioxide free power generation.

In his book he makes a very convincing case that it is only by using both renewables and nuclear power that we can hope to mitigate the effects of climate change due to the rapidly increasing concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide. He has written a thoughtful book which is well referenced. In it he works through the consequences of adopting the Green's proposed nuclear free future and shows that using renewables to replace nuclear power will have the effect that more fossil fuels will be burnt not less. Furthermore he makes the case that opposition to nuclear power since the 1970's has already resulted in delaying the replacement of old and unsafe plants as a result of a slowdown in investment and research. It has also resulted in the increased use of coal burning power stations. I was sufficiently impressed to write a more detailed review here http://johnpreedy.blogspot.fr/2014/08/nuclear-20-by-mark-lynas-why-green.html

I recommend anyone with and open mind to read his short book.

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Lugus Luna

5.0 out of 5 stars A must read!

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 15, 2014

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Good book about an important topic. I used to be very anti-nuclear, but discovered that my views were based on fear and misinformation. When I started to educate myself I was amazed at what I discovered. The fossil fuel industry has done a great job of making everyone so terrified of nuclear power that we turned away from the one energy source that is capable of fully replacing fossil fuels today with an energy source that is cleaner, safer, more cost efficient and virtually unlimited (assuming the use of third and fourth generation designs).



Not just worth a read, but almost an obligation if you are serious about preserving our environment and ensuring a decent quality of life for our descendants.

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Geoff Kirby

5.0 out of 5 stars This is a timely, clear and welcome statement of ...

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2014

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This is a timely, clear and welcome statement of the necessity of embracing nuclear power as an essential part of a low carbon energy future. This programme should have been pursued decades ago but was thwarted by the dogmatic and irrational anti-nuclear dogma of the 'Green' activists. The facts about nuclear generation safety are surprising and important. My only reservation about this book is that the future development of fusion power generation receives so little mention when the massive ITER project is being built in Southern France. Ultimately the future of a low carbon 'unlimited power' planet lies with fusion research.

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The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Other Stories


The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Other Stories (Vintage Classics) Kindle Edition
by Leo Tolstoy (Author), Larissa Volokhonsky (Translator), Richard Pevear (Translator) Format: Kindle Edition


4.6 out of 5 stars 56 ratings





'As good as anything Tolstoy ever wrote... Self-assured, vital, unforgettable' Guardian


The title story of this collection is about a man battling a mysterious illness. His family visit his bedside, their faces masks of concern. His colleagues pay their respects but only think of the advantages created by his death. This intensely moving story of Ivan Ilyich's lonely end is one of the masterpieces of Tolstoy's late fiction.


The ten other stories in this collection include 'The Kreutzer Sonata', 'The Devil', and 'Hadji Murat' which has been described by Harold Bloom as 'the best story in the world'.
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best Books of the Month, December 2009: To anyone for whom Leo Tolstoy's masterpieces War and Peace and Anna Karenina have stood as giants too daunting to scale, and equally to the many readers who have devoured those novels and are hungry for more, we offer The Death of Ivan Ilyich and Other Stories. Newly translated by the team of Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, who have enlivened the Russian classics for a new generation, this selection of 11 of his finest stories reveals a Tolstoy of many sides and unsurpassed storytelling talents. Along with smaller gems like "Alyosha the Pot," the collection features a handful of thrilling longer tales that each carry the power of a novel: the terrifying murderer's confession of "The Kreuzer Sonata," the breathlessly dramatic path of a single crime through dozens of lives in "The Forged Coupon," and the haunting account of the isolation of mortality in the legendary title story. Most revelatory of all for a modern reader is the final novella, and Tolstoy's final work, "Hadji Murat," the disturbingly contemporary story of a fiercely honorable Chechen warrior caught between local rivalries and the ambivalent reach of a decadent empire. --Tom Nissley
From AudioFile
The title story of this collection, a novella written by Tolstoy after the author's conversion to Christianity, tells the simple, affecting story of the main character's death and the ambitious, successful, and unreflective life that preceded it. Narrator George K. Wilson's characterizations are clear and compelling. He models the protagonist's angst, bewilderment, and agony skillfully, and renders other characters distinctly but without overemphasizing their differences. It's a well-balanced reading that is easy to follow and that brings home the emotional punch of Ivan Ilych's stirring last weeks, days, and moments. Other stories in this well-done set include "The Forged Coupon," "After the Dance," "My Dream," "There Are No Guilty People," and "The Young Tsar." M.G. © AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine
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Product details
File Size: 2587 KB
Print Length: 529 pages
Publisher: Vintage Digital (March 30, 2010)
Publication Date: April 13, 2010
Sold by: PRH UK
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BOB

4.0 out of 5 stars

The smaller Tolstoyan platforms (?? BR for this book?)

October 28, 2015
Format: Paperback|Verified Purchase

NOTE: This review is of the Richard Pevear/Larissa Volokhonsky translation.

One thing that Leo Tolstoy could never be accused of was being a minimalist. He is best known for the massive novel 'Anna Karenina' and the even more massive 'War and Peace'. Almost all of his fiction seems to be an attempt to pack in as much panoramic life as possible. This characteristic applies to his shorter pieces as well as his novels.

This new translation (2009) assembles his best known stories as well as some lesser known ones as well and is presented chronologically, from the earliest, "The Prisoner of the Caucassus", written between the composition of 'War and Peace' and 'Anna Karenina', to his final novella, "Hadji Murat," written over the last two decades of his life and published posthumously a few years after his death. All of the stories deal with the themes familiar in his other works—how can a man lead a moral life, what should his attitude be toward the pleasures of the flesh, honor in the midst of war and equality among the classes.

"The Prisoner of the Caucassus" deals with a young soldier who has obtained leave from his regiment to visit his ailing mother and perhaps marry before she dies. On his way through the mountain passes he takes a wrong turn and is pursued by Tartars. His bafflement as to why these people would want to kill him is similar to young Nicolai Rostov in 'War and Peace', who had grown up in the bosom of family love and could not conceive that anyone would wish him harm. The naiveté quickly disappears as a steely resolve to survive takes its place. Tolstoy is a master at depicting wartime action and the campaigns of pursuit, capture or killing which are inherent in war.

"The Death of Ivan Ilyich", "The Kreutzer Sonata" and "The Devil" are largely concerned with the subjective evolutions of individual consciousness in relation to external perceived challenges. My early exposure to the psychologically penetrating tales of Henry James has made me predisposed to be more comfortable in these subjective realms where specific characters undergo psychological/spiritual journeys. "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" depicts the life of an attorney/judge who has gone through all the right steps and played by the societal rules for reaching success and prosperity in life. He believes that his life has obtained a stability and order and that he has reached the pinnacle of success, until a random accident resulting in a bruise in his side, seemingly inconsequential but escalating to severe internal pain disrupts all of his sense of order. His selfish wife now seems self-absorbed and irritable with Ivan's health crisis as it presents an inconvenience in her life. His escalating illness, never named but presumably cancer, forces Ivan to reevaluate his life and question all his previous judgments. He goes through all the stages of dying to the point of ultimate acceptance. He reaches that point which always fascinated Tolstoy and compelled him to contemplate the process to the ultimate last step of consciousness that he also depicted in 'War and Peace', as if he wanted to venture as close as possible to the 'final frontier' and still be able to return to tell the tale. Ivan's serenity precedes his physical death and achieves the ultimate transformation.

The character in 'The Kreutzer Sonata" seems like he just stepped out of the pages of one of Dostoevsky's intense novels and wandered into Tolstoy's universe. Like Raskolnikov, he is a killer and, also like Raskolnikov, he needs to make a complete, thorough confession to another human. His jealousy and ambivalence to his wife's beauty and seductiveness has culminated in murder. The character repents of the murder, but not, as Tolstoy later made clear, of his aversion to sexual pleasure. Tolstoy's own revulsion toward sexual pleasure in his later life made explicit his own attitude. Despite this obvious bias, the story can be read as a compelling psychological fable without knowing the feelings of the author.

"Master and Man" is one of Tolstoy's most evocative tales. A greedy landowner, Brekhunov, takes his servant, Nikita, with him to a neighboring landowner in order to purchase a valuable piece of land. In his haste to reach his destination before other prospective buyers, he speeds his horse and servant on through a snowstorm, gets lost and, as night approaches, appears to be stranded through the frigid night. The horse is pushed beyond endurance and dies and he abandons his servant, who is succumbing to hypothermia, to find his way, gets lost and ends up back at his sleigh. He undergoes a radical spiritual transformation from self-obsessed aristocrat, willing to sacrifice anyone in behalf of reaching his goal to resignation. This predicament is no one else's doing but his own. He has refused a previous offer to stay with a family overnight and resume his journey in the morning. He realizes too late that he should have accepted that offer. Left with no one else to hold responsible but himself, he decides to cover his dying servant with his own body in the back of the carriage, dying in the process but enabling his servant to survive. Like Ivan Ilyich, he travels through different stages before reaching a spiritual epiphany and considering the worth of someone other than himself. The nocturnal cold and the slow, inevitable acquiescence to the harshness of the environment is reminiscent of the equally chilling Jack London tale, "To Build a Fire".

The final story in the collection, the novella "Hadji Murat," take us full circle back to the Caucassus and tells the story of real life Chechen rebel Hadji Murat who, through a chain of circumstances, felt forced to retain his honor by defying the more militant rebel Shamil, who has held Murat's mother, wife and son captive, and defecting to the Russian forces. Murat is constantly aware that he may be placing himself in an untenable situation in which he is not fully trusted by either the Russians or the Chechens. 


Against this foundation, Tolstoy wanders into the minds of various rebels and Russians, even launching into a tirade against the lecherous and cruel Tsar Nicholas I who prided himself on being against the death penalty while also condemning prisoners to run gauntlets of thousands of blows resulting in certain fatality. Tolstoy lost none of his descriptive powers in the final years of his life. 'Hadji Murat" is as compellingly cinematic as anything he had written previously. My only reservation with the story, as for most of the others in this collection, is that they could all benefit from being fleshed out in greater length. He has the material for several novels here and, while I'm not advocating expanding them to the sizes of his magnum opuses, I feel that they could have been improved by more intensive exploration of the characters and circumstances. The tales race by through successions of characters we don't have enough time to get to know thoroughly before being thrust into another setting. In my view, Tolstoy never reigned in his maximalist tendencies, even in his shorter works. Nonetheless, what we have are still vital and indispensable contributions to a titanic literary career.
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TessaTop Contributor: Pets

VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars

November 22, 2016
Format: Mass Market Paperback|Verified Purchase

Have been meaning to read this classic novella for years and finally did. The outcome is foretold at the very beginning. It is a harrowing read. Ivan Ilyich is a character who you feel you may well have known -- a bright and motivated young man who works hard but doesn't spend a lot of thinking about what his values and needs really are. He achieves success in his career, which becomes the most central focus of his life, while personal relationships and virtually every other pursuit take a back seat. Only near the end of his life does he question his choices.

I have not read much fiction in recent years but I could not put this book down, and I have been thinking about it a great deal since I finished it.
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Elisabetta

5.0 out of 5 starsFor Lovers of TruthNovember 17, 2016
Format: Paperback|Verified Purchase

This book is for lovers of truth.... What starts as a story about a man with little depth ends up being about a man who cannot tolerate lies. His only comfort as he dies is with someone who is simple and natural and accepts the truth of the situation he is in. The main character, Ivan Ilyich, finally at the end connects with a spiritual experience of forgiveness, kindness, and being beyond death. It is beautiful the way Leo Tolstoy exposes the thinking of the different characters and what motivates them. This is literature with amazing depth. A pleasure to read.
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Ed Boyle

4.0 out of 5 starsAn Interesting work of artSeptember 8, 2017
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First, this is not War and Peace, you can read it in a normal time period instead of over an entire season.

In many ways Tolstoy is the first of the modern authors in that I believe he knew and loved all his characters which is one of the primary tenants of brilliant writing. Ivan Ilych, for example, has many contradictory sides that come together within the character and that can only be achieved by a writer who knows more about Ilych than is needed in the story. I write this because the entire story could have been just the dialogue of Ilych with himself, at least if it had been written by someone not as talented and in one dimension. Now, unfortunately I have probably confused you but that is how The Death of Ivan Ilych is, while entertaining from the beginning half way through you realize that the story is not about what you thought it was, it is in a different place, and at that point you are captivated.

Based on the first portion of the story, almost half, the reader feels that this is a biography of a Russian government worker, a judge, and his family and social life. In fact it is about his feelings about life as he closes in on his own death. He questions his relationships, his life, his achievements, the importance of all of those, and the reader can relate if honest with themselves. I kept reminding myself that Gandhi felt this was one of the best works he had ever read and it made it easier to understand Tolstoy’s motive. Without that I may have been lead to believe this was going to be morbid and would end with the grim reaper entering from behind a curtain and miss the teachings that were in my hands.

Maybe now I will take on War and Peace.
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The Death of Ivan Ilyich - Wikipedia

The Death of Ivan Ilyich - Wikipedia

The Death of Ivan Ilyich

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The Death of Ivan Ilyich
Death of Ivan Ilyich title page.jpg
Title page of the 1895 Russian edition
AuthorLeo Tolstoy
Original titleСмерть Ивана Ильича, (Smert' Ivana Ilyicha)
IllustratorOto Antonini
CountryRussia
LanguageRussian
GenreFictionphilosophy
Publication date
1886
Pages114 pages (paperback)
The Death of Ivan Ilyich (RussianСмерть Ивана ИльичаSmert' Ivána Ilyichá), first published in 1886, is a novella by Leo Tolstoy, considered one of the masterpieces of his late fiction, written shortly after his religious conversion of the late 1870s.[1]
"Usually classed among the best examples of the novella",[2] The Death of Ivan Ilyich tells the story of a high-court judge in 19th-century Russia and his sufferings and death from a terminal illness.

Plot[edit]

Characters[edit]

  • Ivan Ilyich (Ilyich is a patronymic, his surname is Golovin) is a highly regarded official of the Court of Justice, described by Tolstoy as, "neither as cold and formal as his elder brother nor as wild as the younger, but was a happy mean between them—an intelligent, polished, lively, and agreeable man."[3] As the story progresses, he becomes more and more introspective and emotional as he ponders the reason for his agonizing illness and death.
  • Praskovya Fëdorovna Golovin is Ivan's unsympathetic wife. She is characterized as self-absorbed and uninterested in her husband's struggles, unless they directly affect her.
  • Gerasim is the Golovins' young butler. He takes on the role of sole comforter and caretaker during Ivan's illness.
  • Peter Ivanovich is Ivan's longtime friend and colleague. He studied law with Ivan and is the first to recognize Ivan's impending death.
  • Vasia is Ivan's son.
  • Lisa Golovin is Ivan's daughter.
  • Fëdor Petrishchev is Lisa's fiancé.

Plot summary[edit]

Ivan Ilyich lives a carefree life that is "most simple and most ordinary and therefore most terrible". Like everyone he knows, he spends his life climbing the social ladder. Enduring marriage to a woman whom he often finds too demanding, he works his way up to be a magistrate, thanks to the influence he has over a friend who has just been promoted, focusing more on his work as his family life becomes less tolerable.
While hanging curtains for his new home one day, he falls awkwardly and hurts his side. Though he does not think much of it at first, he begins to suffer from a pain in his side. As his discomfort grows, his behavior towards his family becomes more irritable. His wife finally insists that he visit a physician. The physician cannot pinpoint the source of his malady, but soon it becomes clear that his condition is terminal. Confronted with his diagnosis, Ivan attempts every remedy he can to obtain a cure for his worsening situation, until the pain grows so intense that he is forced to cease working and spend the remainder of his days in bed. Here, he is brought face to face with his mortality and realizes that, although he knows of it, he does not truly grasp it.
During the long and painful process of dying, Ivan dwells on the idea that he does not deserve his suffering because he has lived rightly. If he had not lived a good life, there could be a reason for his pain; but he has, so pain and death must be arbitrary and senseless. As he begins to hate his family for avoiding the subject of his death, for pretending he is only sick and not dying, he finds his only comfort in his peasant boy servant, Gerasim, the only person in Ivan's life who does not fear death, and also the only one who, apart from his own son, shows compassion for him. Ivan begins to question whether he has, in fact, lived a good life.
In the final days of his life, Ivan makes a clear split between an artificial life, such as his own, which masks the true meaning of life and makes one fear death, and an authentic life, the life of Gerasim. Authentic life is marked by compassion and sympathy, the artificial life by self-interest. Then "some force" strikes Ivan in the chest and side, and he is brought into the presence of a bright light. His hand falls onto his nearby son's head, and Ivan pities his son. He no longer hates his daughter or wife, but rather feels pity for them, and hopes his death will release them. In so doing, his terror of death leaves him, and as Tolstoy suggests, death itself disappears.

Interpretation[edit]

In 1984, philosopher Merold Westphal said that the story depicts "death as an enemy which (1) leads us to deceive ourselves, (2) robs us of the meaning of life, and (3) puts us in solitary confinement."[4] In 1997, psychologist Mark Freeman wrote:
Tolstoy's book is about many things: the tyranny of bourgeois niceties, the terrible weak spots of the human heart, the primacy and elision of death. But more than anything, I would offer, it is about the consequences of living without meaning, that is, without a true and abiding connection to one's life ... (384)[5]
Indeed, the mundane portrayal of Ivan's life coupled with the dramatization of his long and grueling battle with death seems to directly reflect Tolstoy's theories about moral living, which he largely derived during his sabbatical from personal and professional duties in 1877. In his lectures on Russian literature, Russian-born novelist and critic Vladimir Nabokov argues that, for Tolstoy, a sinful life (such as Ivan's) is moral death. Therefore, death, the return of the soul to God, is, for Tolstoy, moral life. To quote Nabokov: "The Tolstoyan formula is: Ivan lived a bad life and since the bad life is nothing but the death of the soul, then Ivan lived a living death; and since beyond death is God's living light, then Ivan died into a new life – Life with a capital L."[6]
Death permeates the narrative in a realistic and absorbing fashion, but the actual physicality of death is only present in the early chapters during Ivan's wake. Instead, the story leads the reader through a pensive, metaphysical exploration of the reason for death and what it means to truly live. Tolstoy was a man who struggled greatly with self-doubt and spiritual reflection, especially as he grew close to his own death in 1910.[7] In his book A Confession, Tolstoy writes:
No matter how often I may be told, "You cannot understand the meaning of life so do not think about it, but live," I can no longer do it: I have already done it too long. I cannot now help seeing day and night going round and bringing me to death. That is all I see, for that alone is true. All else is false.[8]
This personal epiphany caused significant spiritual upheaval in Tolstoy's life, prompting him to question the Russian Orthodox Churchsexualityeducationserfdom, etc.[9] The literature Tolstoy composed during this period is some of his most controversial and philosophical, among which falls The Death of Ivan Ilyich and other famous short stories such as The Kreutzer Sonata and The Devil. From a biographical standpoint, therefore, it is possible to interpret The Death of Ivan Ilyich as a manifestation of Tolstoy's embroilment with death and the meaning of his own life during his final years.[10] In other words, by dramatizing a particular sort of lifestyle and its unbearable decline, Tolstoy is able to impart his philosophy that success, such as Ivan Ilyich's, comes at a great moral cost and if one decides to pay this cost, life will become hollow and insincere and therefore worse than death.[9]
Martin Heidegger's magnum opusBeing and Time (1927), refers to the novella as an illustration of Being towards death.[11]

English translations[edit]

Adaptations[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Jahn, Gary R. (1999). Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilʹich: A Critical Companion. Northwestern University Press. p. 3.
  2. ^ "Tolstoy, Leo." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2014.
  3. ^ Tolstoy, Leo (1886). The Death of Ivan Ilyich. The Story and Its Writer. Ed. Ann Charters: Bedford/St. Martin's (2011). pp. 794–833.
  4. ^ Westphal, Merold (1984). God, Guilt, and Death: An Existential Phenomenology of Religion. (1984) : , 1987. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. p. 90. ISBN 0253204178.
  5. ^ Freeman, Mark (July 1997). "Death, Narrative Integrity, and the Radical Challenge of Self-Understanding: A Reading of Tolstoy's 'Death of Ivan Ilyich'". Ageing & Society17 (4): 373–398. doi:10.1017/S0144686X97006508.
  6. ^ Nabokov, Vladimir Vladimirovich (1980). Lectures On Russian Literature. Harcourt. p. 237.
  7. ^ Merriman, C. D. (2007). "Biography of Leo Tolstoy"The Literature Network. Jalic Inc. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  8. ^ Tolstoy, Leo (1882). A Confession. Mineola: Dover Publications. p. 18. ISBN 0-486-43851-1.
  9. Jump up to:a b "The Death of Ivan Ilyich: About the Author". The Big Read (2006–2011). Missing or empty |url= (help)
  10. ^ Podgorski, Daniel (October 20, 2015). "Proximity to Death: Authentic Living and Authentic Dying in Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich"The Gemsbok. Your Tuesday Tome. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  11. ^ Kaufmann, Walter (Summer 1959). "Existentialism and Death". Chicago Review13 (2): 75–93. doi:10.2307/25293517JSTOR 25293517.

External links[edit]