The Idiot (Penguin Classics) | Fyodor Dostoyevsky | Tedious but rewarding
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The Idiot (Penguin...
The Idiot (Penguin Classics)
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Penguin Classics
, 2004 - 768 pages
average customer review:
based on 6 reviews
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highly recommended
Inspired by an image of Christ?s suffering, Fyodor Dostoyevsky set out to portray ?a truly beautiful soul? colliding with the brutal reality of contemporary society. Returning to St. Petersburg from a Swiss sanatorium, the gentle and naive Prince Myshkin?known as ?the
idiot
??pays a visit to his distant relative General Yepanchin and proceeds to charm the General and his circle. But after becoming infatuated with the beautiful Nastasya Filippovna, Myshkin finds himself caught up in a love triangle and drawn into a web of blackmail, betrayal, and, ultimately, murder. This new translation by David McDuff is sensitive to the shifting registers of the original Russian, capturing the nervous, elliptic flow of the narrative for a new generation of readers.
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I LOVE Dostoevsky
If you love to read and you haven't read this yet, I don't know what the heck you're waiting for. This is one of my favorite books. Yes there are a lot of subplots and long monologs, but that is part of the beauty of it. At one point in the book he talks about a man who was sentenced to death and then pardoned at the last minute and what went through his head, which actually happened to Dostoevsky. Things like this may not really advance the plot, but they are interesting in and of themselves and help develope the charectors.
Tedious but rewarding
This book is a delightful read if you can last through it. Similar to a work out you must put a lot of effort to get results. The characters are delightful, and delightfully terrible depending on the character. The social interaction of 19th century Russia is exposed wonderfully in this book. The way people act, their cold secret desires, their quest for wealth and respect are all illustrated vividly.
Myshkin is a great man who is thrown into what we could today call "the real world". His kindness and polite behavior makes others think he is an
idiot
. I find this situation to be analogous to today's world. How often are we suspicious of people who are kind? How often are we conniving like Nastasya? I'm sure people have changed since the 19th century; however I am also sure they stayed the same. "The Idiot" is a vivid almost intoxicating portrayal of humanity with both its flaws and virtues. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who can last through the entire text. Also you may consider the Barnes and Noble
classics
edition which offers content that analyzes Dostoevsky's state of mind and motivations for writing certain passages in the novel.
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Dead Souls
Dostoevsky's "The
Idiot
" is a work with which the author himself was never truly satisfied, but even in its 'unrefined state' it is complete, masterful, and deeply moving. It vies with "The Brothers Karamazov" in my mind for the title of greatest novel ever written, and is in my mind a must-read. The depth and insight into the human soul is a fascinating product genius.
The pace of
classics
is different from contemporary novels and takes some getting used to, and Dostoevsky is no exception. For people who wonder whether they will find the work tedious, Dostoevsky's works are long, but very rewarding.
The
Penguin
Classics edition has a helpful introduction and is less expensive than most other editions.
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wonderfully depressing.
I love this book, love it. Overall it's not as good as Crime and Punishment or Brothers Karamazov, but I think it offers something a little different, and worthwhile in it's own right.
C&P and Brothers, while dreary, have some sort of resolution to them, which leaves you feeling not cheerful, but if nothing else, a little satisfied. The
Idiot
on the other hand is straight up, unadulterated, depressing, tragedy. Prince Myshkin is so good, the women are so beautiful, and their lives are utterly twisted, ravaged, and destroyed. The end. I don't think another author has ever been so brutally cruel and merciless to his characters.
Only a God could save a world as terrible as the one that destroys Myshkin, and I think that's sort of the point of the book. This book is incredibly sad, and completely beautiful.
the four star rating is in comparison to other Dostoyevsky, but by other standards, this book would certainly be a five.
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Not my First Choice in Dostoyevsky's work
Dostoyevsky is one of my very favourite writers, but I must admit this novel was a bit disappointing to me. And this, despite some really interesting moments. I wouldn't say it's a bad novel at all, I'll just point out a few things that may make one rather reluctant to compare this novel to other novels of the same author.
For instance, the plot takes hundreds of pages, often to go nowhere at all. My edition, a new translation dating from 2004, is 720 pages long. And often, there are elements, subplots, and other things that just lead to nothing; which can be interesting in itself; Dostoyevsky, a post modern writer from the 19th Century? Not exactly.
In fact, poor Dostoyevsky had to write very quickly and publish as he went, in order to survive and have food... So the plot's many weirdities totally make sense in the light of this. Yet, 720 pages of intricate plotting that seem to go nowhere and for unknown reasons is rather.... post-modern, and not necessarily in the best meaning.
I like the characeter of the "
idiot
", even though I thought this was going to be pushed somewhat more, and somewhat differently. I think the main weakness of this novel is that it's not "tight". I mean, there are many subplots, not necessarily connected, and no big plot; which again is not necessarily a bad thing in itself, but it makes one feel a bit lost in space as to what goes on. Things go on, yes, but why? That's what I mean by "there is no real plot".
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