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Literary FictionClassic LiteraturePsychological Fiction

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Russian · b. 1821

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.6 / 5Top rating 4.9 / 5

Fyodor Dostoevsky was a Russian novelist whose works, including Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov, explored suffering, faith, and the depths of human psychology with unmatched intensity.

Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote his greatest novels under conditions of enormous personal pressure — debt, epilepsy, a history of imprisonment in Siberia — and the sense of moral and existential urgency in his work is not affected. Crime and Punishment follows the student Raskolnikov as he commits a murder he has convinced himself was philosophically justified, then unravels psychologically as the consequences accumulate. The novel is a profound investigation of guilt, pride, and the human need for redemption, and it reads with the psychological intensity of the best modern thriller.

The Brothers Karamazov, his final and most ambitious novel, is set against a trial for parricide but is really a vast debate about God, suffering, free will, and the nature of love. The three brothers — the sensualist Dmitri, the intellectual Ivan, and the saintly Alyosha — represent different responses to existence, and Dostoevsky gives each case its full weight. The chapter known as “The Grand Inquisitor,” in which Ivan presents his argument against God, is one of the most remarkable passages in European literature: a philosophical challenge so honest that Dostoevsky, a committed Christian, could not refute it within the novel’s own terms.

Dostoevsky is not easy reading — his novels are long, digressive, and emotionally intense — and some readers struggle with his treatment of women, which can be reductive even within the 19th-century context. But for readers prepared to engage seriously, the rewards are extraordinary. Few writers before or since have mapped the interior of human anguish with such unflinching honesty.

5 Books Reviewed

The Brothers Karamazov book cover

The Brothers Karamazov

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.9

Three brothers — the sensualist Dmitri, the rationalist Ivan, and the saintly Alyosha — are bound together by the murder of their corrupt father. Dostoevsky's final and greatest novel asks the hardest question: if God does not exist, is everything permitted?

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Crime and Punishment book cover

Crime and Punishment

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.8

Raskolnikov, a destitute former student in St. Petersburg, murders a pawnbroker to test his theory that extraordinary people are above conventional morality — and then spends the rest of the novel being destroyed by his own conscience. Dostoevsky's most accessible masterpiece is the definitive novel about guilt.

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Demons book cover

Demons

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.4

A novel based on a real 1869 political murder — a charismatic revolutionary named Stavrogin and the nihilist cell he inspires drive a provincial Russian town toward catastrophe.

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Notes from Underground book cover
Editor's Pick

Notes from Underground

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.4

A spiteful, self-contradicting underground man addresses us from his Petersburg apartment — a novella that inaugurated modern psychological fiction and anticipated existentialism by seventy years.

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The Idiot book cover

The Idiot

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.4

Prince Lev Myshkin returns to Russia after years of Swiss treatment for epilepsy — gentle, sincere, and incapable of the social calculus that governs everyone around him. Dostoevsky's attempt to portray a truly good man, and what happens when such a man meets the world.

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