Part One, Chapter 1
Leo Tolstoy
Tolstoy opens "Anna Karenina" with a claim that challenges the ideal of unique happiness. The uniformity of happy families suggests a formulaic balance, a harmony easily disrupted. Unhappiness, however, is like a fingerprint—distinct, influenced by personal failures and specific miseries. Victorian society often idealized family life, yet Tolstoy offered a subtler, more human portrait of its complexities. This line casts a long shadow, reminding us of the unique burdens that individuals and families bear.