The Gospel in Brief
The Life of Jesus
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4.0 • 4 Ratings
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The greatest novelist of all time retells the greatest story ever told, the life of Jesus Christ, in The Gospel in Brief—Leo Tolstoy’s riveting, novelistic integration of the four Gospels into a single, twelve-chapter narrative of Christian philosophy. Virtually unknown to English readers until now, Dustin Condren’s groundbreaking translation from the Russian opens a precious new world of Tolstoy’s masterful literary talent to fans of War and Peace and Anna Karenina.
This daring synthesis strips away miracles and dogma to reveal the core of Jesus’s ethical and spiritual message.
A Unified Gospel: Discover a single, seamless narrative woven from the four Gospels, presenting the life of Jesus as a cohesive and powerful story.The Core Teachings of Jesus: Experience a version of the Gospels that sets aside supernatural events to focus on the practical, ethical philosophy at the heart of Christ’s message.Tolstoy's Spiritual Journey: Understand the profound personal crisis that led the celebrated author of War and Peace to re-examine Christianity and find a new meaning to life.A Groundbreaking Translation: Read the first English version translated directly from Tolstoy's approved Russian manuscript, restoring the author's original structure and intent.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Tolstoy's no-frills, just-the-facts-ma'am version of the life of Jesus Christ and his teachings makes a readable account out of the four Gospels that begin the New Testament, but it bears little stylistic trace of the Tolstoy familiar to most readers. Starting with the conception by an "unknown father" (but glossing over the first 30 years of Jesus' life) and ending with the crucifixion (but avoiding the resurrection), Tolstoy's account is a tight, accessible, and refreshing distillation of Christ's teachings. The author eschews the miracles from Christ's story to focus instead on his messages. Those messages can be pedantic, but generally are conveyed with economy, although some of Christ's teachings for instance, his views on celibacy for bachelors are a hard sell today. Tolstoy's preface, in which he explains his conversion to Christianity and justifies his reconstruction of the Gospels by arguing that Jesus never wrote his own version, is a nice addition, as is the appendix of verses the Russian author draws on for his life of Christ.