This section contains 244 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
[In "The Red and the White,"] Henri Troyat painted, with considerable effect, the impact of the Russian Revolution on the Danovs, an upper-middle-class family in Moscow. Now "Strangers on Earth" chronicles the fortunes of his characters after their escape to France.
Inevitably the pace of the story slows. In the earlier novel the Danovs were participants in a flamboyant cataclysm. In the present one they are subject to the slow gray attrition of exile….
[Mr. Troyat] knows the Danov milieu down to the last concierge's sneer. But in "Strangers on Earth" intellectual knowledge seldom turns into live emotion. The melancholy dash and the sweeping plot line which served the author so well in "The Red and the White" find hardly a foothold in this slower, drabber, but also more complex sequel. Needed here is not the thunder and speed of the historical novel, but a sensitivity to social...
This section contains 244 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |