'Lives of Remarkable Men' was a series established by Maxim Gorky in the 1930s so that the Soviet Union might know its heroes. It's ironic that Liudmila Saraskina's deeply admiring biography of the David who challenged the Soviet Goliath should now appear under its imprint. As Saraskina tells the story, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a Russian patriot and Orthodox Christian, was a man with a mission from the first. Unswerving, uncompromising, beset by perils and enemies, stoically enduring great ordeals, he set out to bring down the Soviet system. Like any prophet - like Lenin, to use an analogy more congenial to Solzhenitsyn than to Saraskina - he knew himself born to a historic destiny, suffering agonies of frustration when its accomplishment seemed impossible. In the end, his mission, like Lenin's, succeeded. In fact, one might say that it succeeded at Lenin's expense, a triumphant negation of Lenin's success.
LRB 11 September 2008 | PDF Download
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