I wanted to write about these books because I read them while working at the library.
I wanted to recommended most interesting books which I read myself along time when I worked in library. I was enjoyed to much to read them. It was help me to understand me and human being.
Feodor
Dostoevsky works of fictions include 15 novels and novellas, 17 stories, and 5
translation. Many of his longer novels were first published in serialized from
in literary magazines and journals. The years gives below indicate the year
which the novel’s final part or first complete book edition was published. In
English many of his novels and stories are known by different titles.
His
books have been translated into more than 170 languages.
And today I wanted to recommended interesting and most reading books in the world.
10.
Poor Folk
This
is an epistolary novel that is, a table told as a series of letters between the
characters. And oh,what characters these are! Makar Dievuskin Alexievitch is a
copy writer, barely squeaking by; Barabara Alexievna works as a seamstress, and
both face the short of everyday humiliation society puts upon the poor. These
are people respected by no one, not even by themselves. These are folks too
poor, in their circumstances, to marry; the love between them is a chaste and
proper thing, a love that brings some readers to tears.
Fyodor
Dostoevsky has something profound to say about these people and his
circumstance and he says it very well.
9. Notes from Underground
8.
Humiliated and Insulted
7.
The eternal Husband
6.
White Nights and after stories
"White Nights" is a short story written by F.M. Dostoevsky and originally published in 1848. Its success was so great that several films were made after it. Some of them are older, others newer. The great Russian writer born in Moscow is much better known for his other works. "Crime and Punishment", "Karamazov Brothers", "The Idiot", "Demons", "Notes from the Underground", "The Player", "Poor People", "Memories of the Dead", "The Teenager" and "Humiliated and Forgotten" . But these are just some of his writings, his work being extremely extensive.
“White Nights” is a short prose written by F.M. Dostoevsky at a fairly young age, early in his career
Its value is probably not so great, but that does not make it less worth reading. Like other stories by the Russian writer, "White Nights" is told in the first person by an anonymous narrator. This is a young man who lives in St. Petersburg, but suffers from loneliness. In addition, he is a great dreamer, sometimes preferring to stay in his world than to join the ranks of others.
Probably today we would consider him as one of the most suitable representatives of the introverted personality. But his life changes when he meets and befriends a young woman. Moreover, he even falls in love with her quite quickly. However, his love will not be shared due to the fact that the girl already loves someone else. And she's waiting for that someone to come back into her life.
5. Adolescents
One of the most important and influential writers in the world, the author of the masterpieces Crime and Punishment, The Karamazov Brothers, The Idiot or Demons, books translated into all languages, adapted for theater or screened.
Unlike Dostoevsky's other novels, The Adolescent is told from the perspective of a nineteen-year-old, whose naivety is reflected in a narrative voice as naive as the book's protagonist. The illegitimate son of a depraved landowner, the young Arkadi Makarovici Dolgoruki oscillates constantly between the attempt to expose his father's mistakes and the hidden desire to gain his appreciation. Armed with a document that he imagines will give him full power over others, Arkadi goes to Petersburg to meet his father, but this initiatory experience reveals the concrete miseries of adult life and fundamentally changes his view of the world. Dostoevsky sees the passage of his character through adolescence as a continuous state of insecurity, ignorance and imperfection, but also of fantasy and exuberance in which everything is possible.
4. Demons
I made a habit of writing reviews of some readings before the end of the process. Maybe the situation is blameworthy, but I do not regret this fact, for the simple reason that such ideas are volatile, fresh, beyond templates or prejudices.
Dostoevsky's novel "Demons" is first and foremost a kind of challenge for me, a commitment that I made with dexterity and passion. It may sound somewhat exhilarating, but believe me it's hard to read the Russian classic.
The first cause, and probably the most obvious, is volume. Russians like to write a lot, complicated and extremely explicit. Some scenes lasted a few chapters, others were reduced to simple spontaneous lightning.
The second - the construction of the characters. Dostoevsky has the feverishness of a parapsychologist, emphasizing not only the static features, but also the behavioral metamorphoses of heroes. The meticulousness and satire with which he describes the portrait of the characters is worthy of the talent of a true critic of human drama.
3.
The Idiot
Unintelligible
to anyone for the pure sincerity he shows, for his behavior of first everyone
and due to the epilepsy he suffered, he receives this nickname being fully
aware of this.
Charming
in his innocence, he attracts the sympathy of those around him and ends up
attaching himself to Nastasia Filippova, a very beautiful woman, and Aglaia
Ivanova, adolescents from a good family. His attachment to these two people is
not necessarily out of love, but rather out of compassion, which ultimately
makes him suffer a lot.
Receiving an inheritance, Miskin remains unchanged but face
to face with the two women and driven by pity, he makes a choice (not
necessarily him) that will turn almost everyone against him.
The novel is very complex, with many characters sometimes
described down to the most detail, with realistic scenes and unexpected twists,
with well-thought-out psychological analyzes that are difficult to include in
this summary.
The
story ends with the tragic end of the prince, who arrives back in the
sanatorium, having no chance of being saved after the woman who was supposed to
be his wife is killed by his brother on the cross.
2. The Brothers Karamazov
This
is a great story keeps you guessing for a lot of the time. In parts it gets a
bit tedious when he goes off on one of his psychological character rants.
This book is composed of 12 books, the novel tell the story of the novice Alyosha Karamazov, the non-believer Ivan Karamazov and the soldier Dimitri Karamazov. The action of the novel focuses on the three brothers who each have a pathological predisposition for passion. In a metaphorical sense, it can be said that the brothers somehow make up 3 fundamental hypostases of man. Dimitri, the eldest, is an exponent of sensuality and the body. Ivan, it represents the intellect, the reason.
All
three brothers are in conflict with their father, Feodor Pavlovich Karamazov,
who represents the typology of the depraved man who leads an immoral and
debauched life.
Smerdeakov,
allegedly the fourth brother, illegitimate son, serves his father Feodor
Pavlovich, his evolution is also interesting; having as its existential
principle sophistry he dedicates himself to this concept which will eventually
lead him to suicide.
1. Crime
and Punishment
The
novel Crime and Punishment (1866) established Dostoevsky's literary glory by
appearing for the first time in Russki Vestnik magazine. Followed with interest
by contemporaries and translated into almost all European languages, the novel
Crime and Punishment was the first more complete literary cohesion of his
philosophical conception.
Crime
and Punishment is the first social-philosophical novel by Dostoevsky that
treats the psychology of crime with great seriousness. The starting point of
Dostoevsky's philosophy is the adversity of the bourgeoisie and the capitalist
system. Thus, one of the predominant thematic preoccupations of the writer is
the highlighting of the sufferings and misery to which most people are
condemned.
The
novel's action takes place in the year marked by a serious financial crisis,
and it is no coincidence that Raskolnikov's story begins under the sign of the
same crisis. His family is on the verge of misery, he himself has to interrupt
his studies due to his precarious financial situation; to help her mother and
brother, Dunia wants to sell herself, just like ordinary prostitutes. What
could be more natural in St. Petersburg of misery and usurers than to kill and
rob a usurer ?!
Writer Elena Bogus