Tom Stoppard's magnificent trilogy, The Coast of Utopia, was the most
keenly awaited and successful drama of 2007. Now "Stoppard's crowning
achievement" (David Cote, Time Out New York) has been collected in one
volume, with an introduction by the author, and includes the definitive
text used during Lincoln Center's recent celebrated run. The Coast of
Utopia comprises three sequential plays that chronicle the story of a
group of friends who come of age under the Tsarist autocracy of Nicholas
I, and for whom the term "intelligentsia" was coined. Among them are the
anarchist Michael Bakunin, who was to challenge Marx for the soul of the
masses; Ivan Turgenev, author of some of the most enduring works in
Russian literature; the brilliant, erratic young critic Vissarion
Belinsky; and Alexander Herzen, a nobleman's son and the first
self-proclaimed socialist in Russia, who becomes the main focus of this
drama of politics, love, loss, and betrayal. In The Coast of Utopia,
Stoppard presents an inspired examination of the struggle between
romantic anarchy, utopian idealism, and practical reformation in what
The New York Times calls "brilliant, sprawling . . . a rich pageant."