A Confession (Penguin Books: Great Ideas) (Hesperus Classics)
by Leo Tolstoy
In 1879 the fifty-one-year-old author of War and Peace and Anna Karenina came to believe that he had accomplished nothing and that his life was meaningless. Marking a shift in his career from the aesthetic to the religious, Tolstoy's Confession relates this spiritual crisis, posing the question: Is there any meaning in my life that will not be destroyed by my death? It is a timeless account of an individual's struggle for faith and meaning.
During the last years of his life, Leo Tolstoy kept one book invariably on his desk, read and reread it to his family, and recommended it to all his friends: a compendium of wise thoughts gathered over the course of a decade from his wide-ranging readings in philosophy and religion, and from his own spiritual meditations. It was banned under the Communists, and only one volume, A Calendar of Wisdom, drawn largely from the writings of other famous thinkers, has been published before in English....
7 best short stories by Maxim Gorky (7 Best Short Stories, #35)
by Maxim Gorky
The Cook's Wedding and Other Stories (Tales of Chekhov (Ecco), #12)
by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
The Horse-Stealers and Other Stories (Tales of Chekhov (Ecco), #10)
by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
Cinderella (Classics Illustrated Junior, #3) (Fairy Tales)
by Charles Perrault
In her haste to flee the palace before the fairy godmother's magic loses effect, Cinderella leaves behind a glass slipper. The illustrations set the story in 1920s London.