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L**X
Breathtaking
Crime and Punishment is set in Russia in the 1800's. It is written from the perspective of the protagonist Raskolnikov; a young student. Despite its reputation as being hard going, I found it easy to read and impossible to put down.Due to financial hardship and circumstance Raskolnikov commits murder. Russia was economically and politically unstable at the time of writing and one of the greatest arguments in favor of socialism is that, if people were equal would crime be eliminated? Would the reason for acting criminally no longer exist? The novel spreads this message, without focusing politics as a major theme. Drawing upon the writings of Marx and Engels, Russia became Communist in 1917 under Lenin, succeeded by Stalin after Lenin's death in 1925.As the title suggests the crime - one man murdering another and; punishment - the guilt, paranoia, mental deterioration and then incarceration are the major themes, the content of the entire novel. Other plot-lines such as romance take a significant back seat. Love does indeed suffer as a consequence of the crime, part of the punishment I guess.A tale of love, justice, psychology and suffering; this is a wonderful read, and despite what Willy Mason says, you should read Dostoevsky at your age.
L**T
Amazing Portrayal of Crime and Pyschology
The start of this book potentially can come across as rather slow, although if you stick through it to get to part 2, you are invited into a glorious exploration of morality and the psychology of a troubled man confined by guilt.More than just a novel of crime and justice, but a poignant tale of society and psychology.
N**A
One of my favourite finds!
First thing of note, the ‘leather’ material is a soft touch type feel with a slight texture to it. Also doesn’t leave scratch marks easily like some other soft type leathers. The foil seems planted and vibrant, especially against the red background. Paper isn’t exactly smooth, it has a grainy type of texture to it. Font is a large enough and nothing is misprinted, blotchy or uneven etc.I got this on sale for £14, so, can’t complain. Retail price is £25 and I can honestly say I would pay the retail price for this particular Wilco book. It’s a great alternative, or ‘match’ in theme with the Barnes and Noble leather bound series. Which retail for around £25-35. Though they are better quality in many areas over the Wilco, finding the Crime and Punishment version in Barnes and noble is almost impossible, or overpriced - this is a great alternative.
J**N
So overly dramatic, yet so relevant
I started reading Crime and Punishment, which I had somehow missed during school reading, as a personal test to see if I can still enjoy the classics, or if the long winded descriptions would now, in the age of the internet, seem long and tiresome.What I found is an immensely captivating tale, written half in the air of philosophical and psychological musing, and half as retelling juicy gossip. Only Dostoyevsky could probably pull off the combination of the two so splendidly. It feels hard to put down and yet calls for pause on its own. It is worth the time to see through.
J**R
This book isn’t Crime and Punishment
This book isn’t even Crime and Punishment - it’s The Brothers Karamazov with the wrong front cover!
M**J
Kindle version is not Crime and Punishment, but The Brothers Karamazov
I am not sure what went wrong, but I purchased Kindle version, only to find out that I am actually reading The Brothers Karamazov. I keep reading it, as I like Dostoyevski's books, but if you want to read Crime and Punishment, the Kindle version is definitely not this book. 🙃😀
A**R
A long haul but well worth reading.
This is another classic novel that I enjoyed very much. I would never have read in book form but it seemed do-able on the e-reader.I found the names of the characters muddling and think that if I had learned even elementary Russian I would understand something more about the names and places.The story is very detailed Dostoevskisy does not shrink at all from "telling it like it is", except he doesn't give any detail about people's sex lives. The psychology is quite apparent and is partly what makes the story so long.If you had been putting off reading some of the classics - give this one a go. It was a good £00.38p's worth, and would keep you going through several train journeys..........
C**N
A study in nihilistic delusion
In my experience, all "great" fiction works on more than one level, and continues to compel readers' attention for many decades after it was written - something I certainly found true of Crime and Punishment.Other reviewers have said how gripping the story of Raskolnikov is. He is a psychopath of a type familiar from a thousand 20th and 21st century thrillers, in print and on screen. I could well believe that Hitchcock read this book and learned from it, because the build-up of tension is Hitchcockian.Nabakov was not a fan of Dostoevsky, thinking him a bit of a bore and an eccentric - and not a particularly accomplished writer. Humbly, I have to disagree. As well as being a brilliant psychological drama, it's a critique of Russian society and the intellectual climate in the 1860s, just a few years after the emancipation of the serfs, when ideas like nihilism were in the air. If Raskolnikov had 'lived' 60 years later, he might have found a focus for his life in Bolshevism. Although that, as we know, might have involved him in mass-murder, or even genocide as one of Stalin's henchmen, rather than the single murder he commits in Crime and Punishment.
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