Conversation

2. The conceit of this series was to imagine a commentary on the age of Trump by transposing him into the world of Tolstoy’s “moral tales”—the world of vain and corrupt landowners, petty aristocrats, and capricious masters who mistake servility and fear for real love.
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4. I would imagine a man with no regard for anyone but himself, utterly incapable of empathy, remorse, insight, or fellow feeling, with no comprehension of truth or ordinary decency, who lives enclosed in the unreflective bubble of his own lies and delusions.
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5. I would depict a man who embodies the contrary of the faith he claims to espouse, and who imparts his moral decay to everyone who aspires to a share in his attention, power, or reflected glory.
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7. In Tolstoy’s tales, his depiction of moral failure serves by way of contrast to highlight authentic spiritual truths. By the same token it can be hoped that history will record our time as having inspired a deep hunger for goodness, decency, and truth.
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Whatever ironies there may be in discovering this fine assemblage of Tolstoy's musings only this evening, they are offset significantly by the gratitude of this reader for such a fine gift to us.
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Highly original, thoughtful, deep, bizarre, wise, by turns very dark and funny. A suitably surreal portrayal of an evil madness only one man experienced, but everybody was forced to endure. Thanks for sharing your talent freely.
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