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View Full Version : The Young Guard - have you read it?



Maaja
13th May 2002, 17:36
At the moment I am reading The Young Guard by Fadeyev, a Russian author who wrote it in 1945. I really adore this book, so touching and so cruel. It really shows well the fight against nazis in 1942 in Ukraine. How young partizans organized a clandestine organisation and how they fought againts Nazist intevension. I suggest everybody to read it! And by the way, I discovered that even Che Guevara liked this book.

Maaja
13th May 2002, 19:11
Alexander Fadeyev entered Soviet literature and at once justly occupied a place in the top ranks with his novel The Rout, a supremely striking book, which is, perhaps, the most stern and striking of the books about the Civil War.
The last finished work was The Young Guard, a similarly stern, truthful novel about the Great Patriotic War, the German occupation, the tragic and decisive year of 1942.

The writer turned grey, stepped past the borders of thirty, forty and fifty years of age, but his own revolutionary youth was ever before him as a period of inestimable value which make him kin with the ideas of Bolshevishm - and for that he was thankful to his youth and loved it. The fact that it was namely Fadeyev who in the fourth year of the Patriotic War began to write about the Komsomols of Krasnodon was no accident.

The Tragedy of the events in Krasnodon did not disconcert him. On the contrary, it attracted him.

The Rout was written when the Civil Was had ended victoriously; The Young Guard was written when the war was drawing to a victorious close. Fadeyev wanted to show the full force of what that cost and what qualities people must have in order ultimately to win in such a war, in order to win in the future no matter in what circumstances. There is no doubt that that was the inner feeling with which The Young Guard was written.