Boris Pasternak

1890–1960

Boris Leonidovich Pasternak was born to an artistic family at the center of Moscow’s cultural scene; his father was a painter and his mother a pianist. He grew up studying piano, composing three (known) completed pieces before enrolling at Moscow University in 1909 for law and, later, philosophy. He left school in 1912 to pursue his passion for poetry. Pasternak’s first poems were published in early 1917; he became widely respected for his serious tone and patriotic themes. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature for his only novel, Doctor Zhivago, in 1958. In response to the abundant praise he earned from the West, Pasternak was expelled from the Union of Soviet Writers, and the novel was banned in the Soviet Union until after his death.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Doctor Zhivago

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[Gordon and Zhivago were on their way home in the evening. The sun was going down.] In one village [they passed through] they saw a young Cossack surrounded by a crowd…