Absorbing documentary presented by Stephen Smith last night. Lots of interviews with family members, the daughter of the "real Lara", the son of the first (Italian) publisher Feltrinelli, the story of how the manuscript was smuggled out of Russia, how the novel became a weapon in the Cold War....and the horrific way in which the regime under both Stalin and Kruschev treated Pasternak and "Lara". It seems Pasternak enjoyed personal protection from the very worst by Stalin who had a soft spot for him, but who didn't hesitate to take it out on "Lara" instead. His Nobel Prize, which he had to refuse in order to stay in Russia....
I read the novel in 1966, 8 years after publication (and before I saw the film). My younger self (I'd already read lots of Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky et al) found it a bit of a shambles of a novel, relying heavily on coincidence and rather petering out at the end (which is probably right, as so many lives did in Soviet Russia) - Pasternak was primarily a poet. I haven't revisited it.
Stephen Smith is best known for humorous or tongue-in-cheek items on Newsnight, and his delivery is quirky to say the least, but this was a good effort I thought.
I read the novel in 1966, 8 years after publication (and before I saw the film). My younger self (I'd already read lots of Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky et al) found it a bit of a shambles of a novel, relying heavily on coincidence and rather petering out at the end (which is probably right, as so many lives did in Soviet Russia) - Pasternak was primarily a poet. I haven't revisited it.
Stephen Smith is best known for humorous or tongue-in-cheek items on Newsnight, and his delivery is quirky to say the least, but this was a good effort I thought.
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