The new app for android makes reading more engaging than ever
This article originally appeared at Russia & India Report
Imagine touching a book to experience it. A new Android app now provides an interactive touch to Tolstoy’s "War and Peace", revealing new, unexpected facets of Russia’s most famous novel.

An Android app(lication) called ‘Zhivye Stranitsy’ (Living pages), has been recently released on the Google Play Store. The app, which is free, aims to make reading interactive and interesting – even for reluctant readers.
Developed by Samsung Electronics, with contributions from experts at Tolstoy Digital and Russia’s Higher School of Economics, the app is currently available only in Russian.
For English readers, one of the app’s features is; in this case an interactive map designed by RIR; which allows you to track the adventures of Prince Andrey Bolkonsky. The first “enhanced” book released on the app is Leo Tolstoy’s epic War and Peace.
What exactly can a mobile app add to a book beyond providing the full text?
1) Timeline
Set during Imperial Russia’s war with the Napoleonic Empire in 1812, the novel meticulously chronicles the warfare, and its impact on the country’s society. Living Pages matches the events of the novel with actual historical facts.

2) Untangling the plot

3) Key profiles

4) An events map
The developers sought advice from experts to place all the novel’s fictional and real locations on a map. Each location comes with quotes describing it, as well as a list of characters that go there. The map spans the whole of Russia and several European cities.

In addition, the map allows users to track the movements of some of the characters.
5) Test your knowledge

“Through this app we were trying to present War and Peace in a completely new light, to reveal elements that are usually only understood by literary critics, rather than ordinary readers,” says Maya Stravinskaya, a producer at Tolstoy Digital. The developers note that their aim is to offer a fresh look at the classic novel, rather than present a specific interpretation of it.
An online vote is being held to decide which work will be available onLiving pages next.
The options include Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, A Hero of Our Time by Mikhail Lermontov, Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak, and The Captain’s Daughter by Alexander Pushkin. Users are also welcome to make their own suggestions.
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