According to Plough, a publication managed by the
Anabaptist Bruderhof Communities since 1920, the work is perfect for those daunted by the longer, complicated works of the Russian master, saying that these tales "illumine eternal truths with forceful brevity." According to Rabbi Dr. Israel Drazin, a 2009 reviewer with
HistoryInReview,
Twenty-Three Tales is an excellent collection that doesn't focus too much on Tolstoy's opinion of Christianity, so much as it is "about proper behavior: that people should help one another." According to famed Tolstoy translator Aylmer Maude, the work contains "several of his best tales for the people: 'How Much Land Does a Man Need?', 'Ilyas', 'The Three Hermits', and the excellent temperance story, 'The Imp and the crust.'" Austrian philosopher
Ludwig Wittgenstein had deep appreciation for Tolstoy and
Twenty-Three Tales. He was particularly fond of the four stories, 'What Men Live By', 'The Two Old Men', 'The Three Hermits', and 'How Much Land Does a Man Need?', of these he said "There you have the essence of Christianity!". ==Editions==