Why should you read Tolstoys War and Peace Brendan Pelsue

“War and Peace,”

a tome,

a slog,

the sort of book you shouldn’t read in bed
because if you fall asleep,

it could give you a concussion, right?

Only partly.

“War and Peace” is a long book, sure,

but it’s also a thrilling examination
of history,

populated with some of the deepest, most
realistic characters you’ll find anywhere.

And if its length intimidates you,
just image how poor Tolstoy felt.

In 1863, he set out to write a short novel
about a political dissident

returning from exile in Siberia.

Five years later, he had produced
a 1,200 page epic

featuring love stories,

battlefields,

bankruptcies,

firing squads,

religious visions,

the burning of Moscow,

and a semi-domesticated bear,

but no exile and no political dissidents.

Here’s how it happened.

Tolstoy, a volcanic soul,

was born to a famously eccentric
aristocratic family in 1828.

By the time he was 30, he had already
dropped out of Kazan University,

gambled away the family fortune,

joined the army,

written memoirs,

and rejected the literary establishment
to travel Europe.

He then settled into Yasnaya Polyana,
his ancestral mansion,

to write about the return
of the Decembrists,

a band of well-born revolutionaries
pardoned in 1856 after 30 years in exile.

But, Tolstoy thought,

how could he tell the story
of the Decembrists return from exile

without telling the story of 1825,

when they revolted against
the conservative Tsar Nicholas I?

And how could he do that without telling
the story of 1812,

when Napoleon’s disastrous
invasion of Russia

helped trigger the authoritarianism
the Decembrists were rebelling against?

And how could he tell the story of 1812
without talking about 1805,

when the Russians first learned of
the threat Napoleon posed

after their defeat at
the Battle of Austerlitz?

So Tolstoy began writing,

both about the big events of history

and the small lives
that inhabit those events.

He focused on aristocrats,
the class he knew best.

The book only occasionally touches

on the lives of the vast majority
of the Russian population,

who were peasants,
or even serfs,

farmers bound to serve the owners
of the land on which they lived.

“War and Peace” opens on the eve
of war between France and Russia.

Aristocrats at a cocktail party fret
about the looming violence,

but then change the topic to those things
aristocrats always seem to care about:

money,

sex,

and death.

This first scene is indicative

of the way the book bounces
between the political and personal

over an ever-widening canvas.

There are no main characters
in “War and Peace.”

Instead, readers enter
a vast interlocking web

of relationships and questions.

Will the hapless
and illegitimate son of a count

marry a beautiful but conniving princess?

Will his only friend survive
the battlefields of Austria?

And what about that nice young girl
falling in love with both men at once?

Real historical figures mix and mingle
with all these fictional folk,

Napoleon appears several times,

and even one of Tolstoy’s ancestors
plays a background part.

But while the characters
and their psychologies are gripping,

Tolstoy is not afraid to interrupt
the narrative

to pose insightful
questions about history.

Why do wars start?

What are good battlefield tactics?

Do nations rise and fall on the actions
of so-called great men like Napoleon,

or are there larger cultural and economic
forces at play?

These extended digressions are part
of what make “War and Peace”

so panoramic in scope.

But for some 19th century critics,

this meant “War and Peace” barely felt
like a novel at all.

It was a “large, loose, baggy monster,”
in the words of Henry James.

Tolstoy, in fact, agreed.

To him, novels were
a western European form.

Russian writers had to write differently
because Russian people lived differently.

“What is ‘War and Peace’?” he asked.

“It is not a novel.

Still less an epic poem.

Still less a historical chronicle.

‘War and Peace’ is what the author wanted
and was able to express

in the form in which it was expressed.”

It is, in other words, the sum total
of Tolstoy’s imaginative powers,

and nothing less.

By the time “War and Peace” ends,

Tolstoy has brought his characters
to the year 1820,

36 years before the events he originally
hoped to write about.

In trying to understand his own times,

he had become immersed in the years
piled up behind him.

The result is a grand interrogation
into history,

culture,

philosophy,

psychology,

and the human response to war.