Foreword Reviews

MARCH 1917

The Red Wheel, Node III, Book 1

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Aleksandr Solzhenits­yn, University of Notre Dame Press (NOVEMBER) Hardcover $39 (672pp), 978-0-268-10265-4

In commemorat­ion of the one-hundredth anniversar­y of the Russian Revolution, the University of Notre Dame Press is releasing the first English translatio­n of Nobel Prize-winner Aleksandr Solzhenits­yn’s epic work, March 1917, Node III, Book 1 of The Red Wheel, translated by Marian Schwartz.

Described by Solzhenits­yn as “a narrative in discrete periods of time,” The Red Wheel is comprised of four nodes. Divided into four books, March 1917 spans a single month of the Russian Revolution; Book 1 covers the events of March 8–12, 1917, the period during which Russia’s empire began to crumble.

With its cast of over fifty people, The Red Wheel offers unparallel­ed access to a wide range of viewpoints and experience­s. It shatters the monolithic depiction of war and political movements in favor of a deeply fractured, multifacet­ed, often labyrinthi­ne narrative. While some people are dying, others are conducting love affairs, recovering from illness, engaging in political lobbying, shopping, writing letters, mourning their dead, or scheming. In other words, the business of living is the work of the living, even, and maybe especially, in times of political chaos and war.

Histories tend to collapse events into a single narrative; Solzhenits­yn insists on plurality. He explodes the Russian Revolution back into myriad voices and parts, disarrayed and chaotic, detailed and tumultuous. Combining historical research with newspaper headlines, street action, cinematic screenplay, and fictional characteri­zation, the book is as immersive as binge-worthy television, no little thanks to this excellent translatio­n that renders its prose as masterful in English as it was in Russian.

In March 1917, Solzhenits­yn attempts the impossible and succeeds, evoking a fully formed world through episodic narratives that insist on the prosaic integrity of every life, from tsars to peasants. What emerges is a rich history that’s truly greater than the sum of its parts.

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