Leo Tolstoy's trilogy is "Anna Karenina", "Resurrection", and "War and Peace".
1. "Anna Karenina"
The work tells the story of Anna, an aristocratic woman, who pursues love and happiness, but faces Karenin's hypocrisy and Vronsky's indifference and selfishness. He suffered a severe head injury and ended up committing suicide by lying on the train and leaving his body in the station.
2. "Resurrection"
The book is based on a real event. It mainly describes the hero Nekhludoff seducing his aunt's maid Maslova, making her pregnant and Being kicked out of the house. Later, she became a prostitute and was tried for murder. The hero appeared in court as a juror and was deeply condemned by his conscience when he saw the woman he had seduced in the past.
3. "War and Peace"
This work centers on the Patriotic War of 1812 and reflects the major historical events from 1805 to 1820.
Character introduction
A. Tolstoy is a famous Russian writer. He was born in a noble family in Samara. In 1901, he entered the Petersburg Polytechnic, dropped out of school, and devoted himself to literary creation. He was obsessed with symbolist poetry in his early years, and published "Lyric Collection" in 1907. After his second collection of poems, "Behind the Blue River" (1911), he turned to the creation of realistic novels, and published the novella "Left Bank of the Volga" (1911) and the novel "The Lame Master" (1912).
Main Works A. Tolstoy is a famous Russian writer. Born in Samara to a noble family on December 29, 1882 [Russian calendar]. In 1901, he entered the Petersburg Polytechnic, but left school midway and began literary creation under the influence of symbolism. The first collection of poems, "Lyric Poems" (1907), was written by the author who considered himself a "decadent".
The second collection of poems "Behind the Blue River" (1911) and the collection of fairy tales "The Magpie's Story" (1910) show that the author strives to get rid of the influence of symbolism and inherits the influence of Russian folk literature and realism. Tradition. The short story collection "The Left Bank of the Volga" (1910), the novels "The Stranger" (1911) and "The Crippled Master" (1912) all describe the economic bankruptcy and mental degradation of Russian aristocratic landowners. Because the author has not completely gotten rid of the influence of symbolism, these works were not successful. After the outbreak of the First World War, he went to the front line as a war correspondent and visited Britain and France (1916). He wrote some essays, features, novels and dramas about the war, such as the feature "Messages on the Way" (1915), short stories The novel "The Beautiful Lady" (1916), and the scripts "The Swallow" (1916), "The Devil" (1916), "The Miserable Flower" (1917), etc. These works show that his thoughts and feelings began to get closer to the people.