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And Quiet Flows the Don
- Narrated by: Stefan Rudnicki
- Length: 13 hrs and 1 min
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Publisher's Summary
Mikhail Sholokhov’s groundbreaking epic novel gives a sweeping depiction of Russian life and culture in the early 20th century. In the same vein as War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy, And Quiet Flows the Don gives listeners a glimpse into many aspects of Russian culture, and the choices a country makes when faced with war and destruction.
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What listeners say about And Quiet Flows the Don
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Liam Foley
- 11-27-20
Do not buy this version!
Whilst I have given high marks for the performance and story I give the minimum overall because this is only volume one of four. This is not clear from the description. If they plan on releasing the other volumes I'd wait until they're released together.
19 people found this helpful
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- Eric J. Drysdale
- 03-14-20
HISTORICAL FICTION AT ITS BEST
It is difficult to extol the virtues of this fine novel, and equally fine narrator too highly.
Sholokhov was born in 1905 and grew up in the Don area of Russia, which he depicted in remarkable detail in his most famous novel, AND QUIET FLOWS THE DON, and various other novels about the Don Cossacks. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1965.
The Novel: Sholokhov worked on the novel for 14 years from 1926 to 1940. Set during the First World War and the Russian Revolution, it became the most widely read work of fiction in the new Communist State and presented the Don Cossacks to Russia and the world as never before. I was most impressed with the evocation of time, place and people, and the economy with which he achieved this. We get to know the various characters, the land in which they live during summer and winter and the challenges they face in peacetime and in war. Readers who enjoy historical novels that transport them to places and people long buried under the sod turned by the plough of time will be most satisfied taking this journey.
The narrator: Stefan Rudnicki is rare even among professionals. Many fine male readers do an excellent job with the prose and the male characters, but not as good with the female characters. Stefan is outstanding across the spectrum: male, female, young, old. The prose is presented in his mellifluous voice and the characters individualised by nuance and expression. A case of the writer’s intention and the narrator’s ability in perfect harmony.
Having read over 2300 books in the past 20 years, the majority on audio and from Audible, I average over 100 books a year and believe, even at this early stage, that this will be my book of the year. Highly recommended.
Happy reading. Eric. E: ericjdrysdale@gmail.com
9 people found this helpful
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- L. Nery
- 08-31-19
Had it in pre-order for many months, and then...
I read the book decades ago, then I saw that the title would be released at Audible. Wow! I could remember very little from the many interweaved plots. But I remembered it as a masterpiece, and was looking forward to "living" in a Cossack village once again, seeing and hearing the characters, so vivid are Sholokov's descriptions.
I pre-ordered 2 months prior to released. As it arrived, I listened, and listened, and listened, and that's how some 60 hours after downloading it I had listened to the book's 13 hours. Superb narration for what is a page-turner. You want to know what comes next for the characters, you want to be there for the changes of each season, you can't wait to hear about the next battle. Brutality can happen any time, and your feelings won't be spared. Tenderness is also always there. What else can be said, except that epic novel is indeed epic.
16 people found this helpful
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- Lee
- 12-01-19
A Beautiful Story
I'll confess that Quiet Flows the Don (along with the second part, the Don Flows Home to the Sea) is my favorite novel. I've read it in both Russian and English, and I consider it the finest novel ever written. That disclaimer aside, I eagerly pre-ordered the audio version as soon as I saw it would be available, and then counted down the weeks until its release. Stefan Rudnicki does justice to the story, and listening to it was a true pleasure. His performance is certainly commendable. It can be a tricky book, with many different characters and shifting viewpoints, so having a skilled narrator is a must. Rudnicki did not disappoint. If you enjoy Russian literature, tales of forbidden love, or sweeping epics, then this is the book for you. Also, check out the 14 part 2015 television adaptation of the novel after you listen to it. You won't be sorry.
6 people found this helpful
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- B. Raman
- 01-22-20
and quiet flows the Don
Very good picture of the Russian life at the beginning of the century. Not Dostoevskiy or Faulkner, but is good overall.
3 people found this helpful
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- None-so-Pretty
- 02-13-20
Nuanced insight into Russia circa 1910
Read this one summer in college and was surprised by how much I had recalled and how much I had forgotten about the brutality of war.
2 people found this helpful
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- wylie smith
- 10-09-21
not close to the whole book
I read this book back in 1969 and still have my Vintage Books translation by Stephen Garry. That edition has for parts: Peace, War, Revolution, and Civil War. The Audible edition skips the last two parts and does end where 'War' does. Personally, I liked the second half best, so I feel like I got ripped off. I saw no indication that the Audible version was 'edited. Sorry folks, but that is dishonest in my book, and this book's ending did not make for a full plot.
1 person found this helpful
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- Ann
- 02-21-21
A Russian Novel Not To Be Missed
A beautiful if tragic tale, Sholokhov gives the reader not only a love story but a window into Cossack history at the turn of the century. He reveals all the social and political changes that are about to be set loose in Russia while telling the story of one particular Cossack family. Stefan Rudnicki does a brilliant job as narrator bringing the characters to life. A book not easily forgotten.
1 person found this helpful
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- c carlson
- 02-05-22
moving
don't know why it is hard,to get all 4 parts. however, it is a good read even with only 1/4 of the story available. the narration was excellent. .
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- Anonymous User
- 06-07-21
Caution - not the whole book!
This is only the first part, although the description does not tell it. The narrator is good, but now you gotta read the rest elsewhere.
6 people found this helpful
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- Kindle Customer
- 06-04-21
Only 1/2 of the novel!!
I loved the performance and book - but discovered a few weeks later that this audiobook only contains the first 1/2 of the novel. Only realized when I began reading the sequel and noticed glaring gaps. Absolutely crazy that this is advertised as the full novel. Seriously, what is going on?
5 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 02-04-21
Only first volume is in this audiobook
Enjoyed the first volume but was expecting the audiobook to be the complete 4 volumes.
2 people found this helpful
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- Waggy From Derby
- 04-13-20
THE WAY TO CONTENTMENT.
The opening chapters could be many families anywhere in the world, the stories are the same, family, love, betrayals, affairs etc. But then the 1st war war interrupts life, and just like stories I heard from other eras, people change. The book does point out the pointlessness of war, and how the lower ranks are treated as fodder by the upper classes. One can be begin to understand why the Russian Revolution happened. Are things any better? Doubtful.
Living a life in a backwater is the best option, trust family, control lust, eat well and read, read, read. That's the way to contentment
1 person found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 01-28-22
Not the complete book.
**Only the first 2 parts, approx. 50% of full book (288 of 566 penguin modern classic). The remaining 2 parts and conclusion to this story is currently unavailable as an Audiobook.
1 person found this helpful
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- Craig
- 07-31-20
Violent, tragic, passionate, monotonous, humorous and very human.
At times overly detailed and boring narrative, but then at times passionate and compelling scenes. Violent, tragic, passionate, monotonous, humorous and very human.
1 person found this helpful
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- 99Albert
- 05-08-22
The Cossacks Final Chapter
Whether Sholokhov wrote, adapted, or didn't write this work is irrelevant. It is an important work that brings us into the final stages of the decline and fall of the Cossacks.
For those who are not familiar with the history of the Cossaks, I will digress. The rise of the Cossacks or Kazaks in the area stretching from the modern Ukraine into Western Asia, began with the Mongol conquest of the Cuman (Turko-Mongolian) Kingdom in the middle of the 13th Century. This multi-ethnic group comprising mostly Slavs and Turko-Mongolians began to forge their unique identity under the Mongolian Golden Horde. The horse culture that had existed in the Steppes of Eurasia for several thousand years was strengthened by the Mongol invasion and their continued dominence over Russia for the following five centuries. Ukrainian serfs, slaves or peasants fleeing the Kievan Rus and the city states further north adopted this horse culture and out of it forged their own identity. The eventual rise of the Czars, particularly the Romanovs, would challenge their existance. Instead of the slow genocide committed on other hapless nationalities, such as the Circassians, the Cossacks would be incorporated into the new Russian Empire to become their chief shock cavalry. However, this compromise with their new overlords, would both forge and doom the legend of the "free men". By the early 20th Century, the Cossack life was in serious decline. Modern warfare, the Russian Revolution with its Bolshevik coup would bring about their final demise.
This story is about the most western of the Cossack Hosts, the Don, and is set in the early 20th Century. It covers the period from the Russo-Japanese war (1905) to the beginning of the Revolution (1917) and takes us into their personal lives, including their casual violence and the commonality of rape. We see them not as legends, but young men trying hold onto their declining nobility and maintain that legend in the face of modern mechanised warfare. This story is not a sweeping historical novel, but instead, it centres on the lives, loves and battles of a particular Eurasian Cossack family. It is a small but useful window on a lost past.
The reader has a rich slavic baratone voice which adds to the atmosphere. Unfortunately, there are times when he drops his voice and it is difficult to hear, but in the overall it is a great listen.