It's a form of last name that is sometimes seen in Russia. I've seen Zhevago (not Zhivago) and, interestingly enough, Mertvago (which, for anyone other than Greg reading this, means "dead" ).
Except I was thinking of z(with the mark above it; using my laptop to type this, so no other alphabets loaded yet into its memory) - ziv, life, and smrt, death, in Serbian.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
So, let's talk about Doctor Zhivago.
15/03/2010 12:51:09 PM
- 1555 Views
I liked it a lot.
15/03/2010 03:24:34 PM
- 819 Views
I mostly agree with your points, but I'm not sure Zhivago was ever disillusioned with revolution.
15/03/2010 09:19:54 PM
- 748 Views
Re: I mostly agree with your points, but I'm not sure Zhivago was ever disillusioned with revolution
15/03/2010 09:57:29 PM
- 860 Views
Yes, it's the Soviet state, not the revolution, that he hates.
15/03/2010 11:16:29 PM
- 684 Views
There will be more later. Much more. So lets start at the beginning.
15/03/2010 04:22:15 PM
- 740 Views
... I'm clearly lacking in braincells.
15/03/2010 05:03:35 PM
- 833 Views
... yes, you moved to scotland? *NM*
15/03/2010 05:42:21 PM
- 317 Views
I didn't notice the Anna Karenina connection. That's a good point.
15/03/2010 09:26:41 PM
- 771 Views
Yes. Perhaps we should tell the non-Russian speakers/readers that the name of the protagonist,
15/03/2010 10:22:39 PM
- 876 Views
Zhivago is the Church Slavonic genitive singular of живой (zhivoi), "living"
15/03/2010 11:18:23 PM
- 722 Views
I knew those
15/03/2010 11:22:02 PM
- 814 Views
I thought this was a great read, and I'm sure I've missed a lot, which will make a reread good too.
15/03/2010 05:16:19 PM
- 871 Views
On balance, there IS a love story. Just not quite the one that most people think.
15/03/2010 09:34:20 PM
- 776 Views
I noticed that as well
15/03/2010 09:42:04 PM
- 855 Views
Yes. This is what I was going to say, just not as articulately. *NM*
15/03/2010 10:12:33 PM
- 306 Views
My initial thoughts
15/03/2010 06:02:21 PM
- 820 Views
Re: My initial thoughts
15/03/2010 08:54:15 PM
- 747 Views
There appears to be a lull, so some background - How many of you have read anything about
15/03/2010 08:19:07 PM
- 742 Views
I've read bits & pieces.
15/03/2010 08:33:41 PM
- 784 Views
Ok, since you're interested, here is some "light" reading for you. Approach with caution.
15/03/2010 08:47:42 PM
- 909 Views
Re: Ok, since you're interested, here is some "light" reading for you. Approach with caution.
15/03/2010 11:05:22 PM
- 794 Views
Thank you for calling it "light" reading. The quotation marks were comforting.
17/03/2010 09:56:26 AM
- 719 Views
I will read and respond to this when I remember to bring my glasses home from work! *NM*
17/03/2010 06:14:31 PM
- 300 Views
Fiction or non-fiction?
15/03/2010 09:21:04 PM
- 914 Views
Familiar with the history, though I've never exhaustively studied the time period.
16/03/2010 02:20:23 PM
- 819 Views
Why would you consider this a classic? What made it so good or profound for (plural) you?
16/03/2010 11:19:23 PM
- 767 Views
Put a question mark at the end of the first sentence and read my response. *NM*
17/03/2010 12:09:58 AM
- 280 Views
Some questions.
19/03/2010 08:27:38 AM
- 718 Views
As an addendum to what Greg wrote:
19/03/2010 05:56:56 PM
- 767 Views
The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them
21/03/2010 05:34:03 PM
- 816 Views
It looks a bit strained to me.
22/03/2010 03:28:34 AM
- 705 Views
So far the reviews are pretty glowing, as are the Amazon reviewers.
22/03/2010 01:44:19 PM
- 814 Views
In other news, I read about 100 pages of The Island at the Center of the World.
22/03/2010 03:48:47 PM
- 755 Views
I finished it last night - the last 100+ pages rather fast, considering how long the whole took.
21/04/2010 01:00:50 AM
- 572 Views