The Brothers Karamazov

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Fyodor Dostoevsky: The Brothers Karamazov (Paperback, 1999, Signet Classic)

mass market paperback, 735 pages

English language

Published June 19, 1999 by Signet Classic.

ISBN:
978-0-451-52734-9
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4 stars (65 reviews)

Dostoyevsky's passionate concern for people and his intense desire to grasp the meaning of life led him to explore the secret depths of humanity's struggles and sins. No action or thought was ever too corrupt or too inhuman for his understanding. The Brothers Karamazov was his last and greatest work. This extraordinary novel tells the dramatic story of four brothers-Dmitri, pleasure-seeking, impatient, unruly...Ivan, brilliant and morose ...Alyosha, gentle, loving, honest...and the illegitimate Smerdyakov, sly, silent, cruel. Driven by intense passion, they become involved in the brutal murder of their own father, one of the most loathsome characters in all literature. (back cover)

116 editions

5/5

5 stars

Uncertain where to start with this one. I could copy paste a synopsis of the Book of Job and then claim the bible would have been better if written by Dostoevsky, but perhaps I shall instead attempt a review (except really it is an informal microessay on his reused themes…..)

This is one of the few books left in the ‘vesky corpus as first reads… I do not enjoy this fact and have been rereading each chapter of this for months and have morphed into the Pepe Silvia image.

In a way, this book was a quilt of the major themes of most of Dostoevsky’s preceding works—amplified. Childhood feels more potent a theme here than in ‘A Raw Youth/The Adolescent,’ which itself continued on from Dostoevsky’s experimentation with this in demons and Stavrogin’s upbringing—i.e., the Q of what shapes a man’s morals before he can even be considered a man? …

In all honesty, only got through 170 pgs before giving up

No rating

I wanted to finish the book, I wanted to like it. I've never read Dostoevsky before and have had this book on my shelf for years. Well, I tried it...but when the hell was it going to get anywhere?

Now the characters, as far as i could tell, were very distinct and had a lot to them. He spends a lot of time setting up his characters and their backstories so we can understand where they are coming from and all...

And then he jumps into some theological discussion between them that slows things down. I hoped this would be a great book to give me some insight into Russian Orthodoxy and life under it before the revolution, but nope. It practically tried to cram some things down my throat that had very little context.

If I hadn't read the introduction thoroughly before tackling this book, there's no way I …

reviewed Os Irmãos Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky (A Obra-Prima de Cada Autor)

Uma obra densa demais para os tempos rápidos atuais.

5 stars

Nesse livro Dostoievski me surpreendeu com uma narrativa bem construída, detalhada e rica.

Conheço livros detalhados, no entanto esse me surpreendeu. Quem diria que Ilucha teria papel tão importante? Quem diria que Katalina e Mitya teriam um momento de redenção? Discordo apenas em uma parte do narrador, mas longe de mim querer ditar algo a obra. Aliocha não é o herói aqui, talvez apenas o mais virtuoso. Acho que não há heróis entre os Karamazov.

Review of 'The brothers Karamazov' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I cannot express how much I love the first half of this book. We meet the Karamazovs, in all their absurb, silly glory. They interact with many others who believe themselves to be less absurd and silly, but we, as readers removed from the peculiar town that gossips about them, know better. The second half is, unfortunately, not as charming. Its repetitive and almost dull. However, i should say, that repetitiveness serves a purpose. We are walked through events of a tragic night several times. First by the accused murderer himself, unable to separate himself from his absurd silliness even to save himself. Then we hear from everyone around him. Those who, it could be argued, he deserves love and understanding from. Finally we hear from the authorities. As the town, and we, contemplate these testimonies, reeling from two other less absurd tragedies the town experiencea in this time, the …

Review of 'The Brothers Karamazov' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Written in the final years of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s life (he died four months after it was published), The Brothers Karamazov is probably his most philosophical novel. It tells the story of four very different brothers who all got involved in the murder of their own father. While similarities can be made between this novel and Crime and Punishment as they share similar themes, they are still vastly different. Rather this book deals more with life, death and the meaning of life.

“The mystery of human existence lies not in just staying alive, but in finding something to live for.”

At the start of the novel we meet Fyodor Pavlovich Karamazov, who fathers three sons during his two marriages and is rumoured for have fathered a fourth illegitimate son. He often makes the list when people talk about ‘the most disgusting characters’ in literature, or similar topics. This forms the basis …

Review of 'Les frères Karamazov' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

Voilà bien 3 semaines que je traîne les Frères Karamazov. Emploi du temps, épaisseur du pavé, autant de facteurs qui ne font que ralentir mon rythme. Mais qu’en est-il de ma motivation ? Cette traduction parues aux éditions Babel nous est présentée d’emblée comme LA traduction, l’ultime et l’idéale, la plus fidèle au texte de Dostoïevski. Soit, je veux bien le croire, le traducteur a du suer sang et eau pour pondre sa version. Malgré tout, on dirait que globalement il en a oublié son français, à force de vouloir coller au texte original. À moins que le russe ne soit pas traduisible. Je ne sais pas. Toujours est-il que des phrases d’un autre monde telles que “brusquement, il se leva, soudain“, ou bien “des regards tendres mais chaleureux“, moi, au bout de 800 pages (sur 1300 environ) je ne peux plus !

Un peu ça va, mais ce style …

Review of 'Brothers Karamazov' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

The record scratched on page 20. Describing a repellent character: "He made the acquaintance at first, in his own words, "of a lot of low Jews, Jewesses, and Jewkins," and ended by being received by "Jews high and low alike." It may be presumed that at this period he developed a peculiar faculty for making and hoarding money."

Based on a Google search, it gets much worse, later presenting the blood libel completely unchallenged by the book's most sympathetic character. I suspect that the presentation of such repellent ideas by otherwise magnificent artists at the turn of the 20th century was not without impact on later real-life events.

My feelings on this beautifully-written book will apparently be complicated.

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Subjects

  • Fathers and sons -- Fiction
  • Brothers -- Fiction
  • Russia -- Social life and customs -- 1533-1917 -- Fiction

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