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Фёдор Достоевский: Demons (Paperback, 1995, Vintage Classics)

Paperback, 768 pages

English language

Published Aug. 15, 1995 by Vintage Classics.

ISBN:
978-0-679-73451-2
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
857904311

View on OpenLibrary

(23 reviews)

Inspired by the true story of a political murder that horrified Russia in 1869, Fyodor Dostoevsky conceived of Demons as a "novel-pamphlet" in which he would say everything about the plague of materialist ideology that he saw infecting his native land. What emerged in 1872 was at once his darkest novel until The Brothers Karamazov and his most ferociously funny. For alongside its relentlessly escalating plot of conspiracy and assassination, Demons (which earlier translators erroneously translated as The Possessed) is a blistering comedy of ideas run amok. And like all of Dostoevsky's novels, it is also a riot of literary voices, whose profusion, energy and variety are rendered wonderfully in this new English version. --back cover

66 editions

reviewed Demons by Фёдор Достоевский (Dover Thrift Editions)

Review of 'Demons' on 'Goodreads'

5/5

I've read and reread this book countless times, anytime I start this and take over 2 days of a break from it I feel compelled to start from the top again.

Very few books do you come across where the writer takes events from life (or whatever fictional setting they've conjured up) and put them onto paper without doing nothing more than narrating these events in their own style and calling it a day. The most brilliant thing about this book is how naturally Dostoevsky swaps from different communication styles from character to character. Arguably this is something he does throughout all his works but it is much more pronounced in demons and especiallythis translation (Pevear & Volokhonsky's).

The book has always been on of my favourites—if
not, my favourite—out of Dostoevsky's corpus. It's not that this story is the most enticing or most unique of his works, …

None

Having just finished reading this book, I'm starting it again from the beginning.

The trouble with long 19th-century Russian novels is that they have lots of characters with quite complicated relationships. Some editions have a list of the more prominent characters at the beginning so that one can refer to it, but this edition doesn't, so when the book picks up the story of a character 100 or more pages on, one has to go paging back to find what was the last thing that happened to them.

My impressions on a first reading are that there is a slow buildup, very different from the current style of starting the story in medias res and telling the backstory later.

In a provincial Russian town there is a lot of gossip. The narrator drops hints to the reader of serious events to come, but the lives of the characters seem deceptively …

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