Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Richard Freeborn

    Richard Freeborn, Emeritus Professor of Russian Literature at the University of London, has published extensively on the subject. His notable works delve into the intricacies of Russian literary history and the evolution of the Russian novel.

    Oxford World's Classics: Fathers and Sons
    Fathers and Sons
    • Oxford World's Classics: Fathers and Sons

      A New Translation by Richard Freeborn

      • 261 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      Fathers and Sons is one of the greatest nineteenth century Russian novels, and has long been acclaimed as Turgenev's finest work. It is a political novel set in a domestic context, with a universal theme, the generational divide between fathers and sons. Set in 1859 at the moment when the Russian autocratic state began to move hesitantly towards social and political reform, the novel explores the conflict between the liberal-minded fathers of Russian reformist sympathies and their free-thinking intellectual sons whose revolutionary ideology threatened the stability of the state.

      Oxford World's Classics: Fathers and Sons1998
    • Fathers and Sons

      • 261 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      When a young graduate returns home he is accompanied, much to his father and uncle's discomfort, by a strange friend "who doesn't acknowledge any authorities, who doesn't accept a single principle on faith." Turgenev's masterpiece of generational conflict shocked Russian society when it waspublished in 1862 and continues today to seem as fresh and outspoken as it did to those who first encountered its nihilistic hero.

      Fathers and Sons1991
      4.2