Confession Audiobook By Leo Tolstoy cover art

Confession

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Confession

By: Leo Tolstoy
Narrated by: Simon Vance
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At this time I began to write, from vanity, greed, and pride. In my writings I did exactly as in life. In order to possess the glory and the wealth for whose sake I wrote, it was necessary to conceal the good, and to display the bad. And so I did.

Tolstoy's autobiographical essay is a dissection of his soul, a study of his life's movement away from the religious certainties of youth, and a vital piece of reading which contextualizes the great works he is best known for. Marking the point at which his life moved from the worldly to the spiritual, Tolstoy's philosophical reassessment of the Orthodox faith is a work that holds vital spiritual and intellectual importance to this very day.

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Thought-Provoking Biographies & Memoirs Inspiring
Profound Spiritual Journey • Thought-provoking Content • Pleasant Voice • Genuine Personal Reflection • Clear Narration

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The content and narration were perfect. Would you expect something less from a Tolstoy work performed by Simon Vance? Thank you, Audible.

Thank you, God, for Leo Tolstoy.

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This essay deals with Leo Tolstoy's struggles of faith as he wrestles questions like the meaning of life and the motives for him to try to live a good life. Though initially extremely critical of the Orthodox Church--hence why this was banned for 20+ years after initial publication--readers have to follow Tolstoy though those doubts to realize alongside him that the deep religious convictions of ordinary people as helping them live rather than constantly analyzing why we're living.

Having previously read Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina", I recognized so many of its themes discussed here as well. There are differences in class and education, admiration for the working class, woes of the intelligencia, marriage and fatherhood, church authority and moral limitations, depression, and the temptations of suicide. This is a great look at his mindset as an author and I recommend to those studying Tolstoy's works.

However, though this is written quite well, I need to include a content warning for the number of times and depth to which Tolstoy dwells on wanting to commit suicide. He details the fluctuations in his mental health and how he came to believe time and again that suicide was the only way to escape his meaningless existence, and I recognize this could be quite triggering for readers. This is the message of "Everything Everywhere All At Once" without the heartwarming characters.

Tough but Well Written Essay

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Tolstoy is a literary giant and is absolutely deserving of that mention. Personally, however, I never enjoyed his great works. As stories, I find them to be incredible journeys. As that which to live by and enjoy in my heart, I could not.

This short but brilliant book really explains exactly why that is and I respect Tolstoy all the more deeply for it. His discussion about why he was motivated by non-religious life, the reality of meaninglessness when using only reason to justify life, that is precisely what made War and Peace and the like leave a poor existential taste in my mouth.

His discussion about faith and what I would contextualize as “genuineness in being” hits so close to home for me that I was nearing tears throughout half of the books runtime. Such an interesting perspective and so familiar to me that I feel as if we are brothers in thought.

Highly recommend this book to anyone whom is secular but questioning or religious and worrisome. Very interesting listen/read.

I understand why I never enjoyed Tolstoy now.

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the narrator had a very clear voice. made a 3 hour drive fly by fast. great overall message.

The truth seeking journey of an intellectual

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Tolstoy walks us through his faith, doubt, depression, and hope. Simon Vance is on point, as usual. It’s a great introduction to apologetics and I sincerely enjoyed it.

Brazenly honest

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