Crime and PunishmentRecommendations

Author:
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Buy on Amazon
Buy on Apple Books

About the book

The two years before he wrote Crime and Punishment (1866) had been bad ones for Dostoyevsky. His wife and brother had died; the magazine he and his brother had started, Epoch, collapsed under its load of debt; and he was threatened with debtor's prison. With an advance that he managed to wangle for an unwritten novel, he fled to Wiesbaden, hoping to win enough at the roulette table to get himself out of debt. Instead, he lost all his money; he had to pawn his clothes and beg friends for loans to pay his hotel bill and get back to Russia. One of his begging letters went to a magazine editor, asking for an advance on yet another unwritten novel — which he described as Crime and Punishment.

One of the supreme masterpieces of world literature, Crime and Punishment catapulted Dostoyevsky to the forefront of Russian writers and into the ranks of the world's greatest novelists. Drawing upon experiences from his own prison days, the author recounts in feverish, compelling tones the story of Raskolnikov, an impoverished student tormented by his own nihilism, and the struggle between good and evil. Believing that he is above the law, and convinced that humanitarian ends justify vile means, he brutally murders an old woman — a pawnbroker whom he regards as "stupid, ailing, greedy…good for nothing."

Overwhelmed afterwards by feelings of guilt and terror, Raskolnikov confesses to the crime and goes to prison. There he realizes that happiness and redemption can only be achieved through suffering. Infused with forceful religious, social, and philosophical elements, the novel was an immediate success.

People recommending Crime and Punishment

Related books

Go the F**k to Sleep

Adam Mansbach

In Search of Lost Time

Marcel Proust

Giovanni's Room

James Baldwin

Gulliver's Travels

Jonathan Swift

Kafka On The Shore

Haruki Murakami

Invisible Cities

Italo Calvino

Lord of Light

Roger Zelazny

Light in August

William Faulkner

It Ends with Us

Colleen Hoover

Love in the Time of Cholera

Gabriel García Márquez

Midnight's Children

Salman Rushdie