B.L. Pasternak, writer of "Doctor Zhivago", is a brilliant poet and his notable poetries well reversed in the Soviet Union appear in a number of his published collections of poetry. However Pasternak himself aspires to write a novel where he can document all of his thoughts and observations. This unusual act is surprising, because readers do not usually take him as a novelist, nor is Pasternak an experienced writer for fictions. This essay aims to explore Pasternak's intension of his insistence on creating a fictional work to show the diversity and turbulent society of his era.This is what I consider Pasternak"s "epic caring" by delivering a real situation and his philsophical meditation of his time.