Book description
From the award-winning translators of Crime and Punishment,
Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky.
Based on a real-life crime which horrified Russia in 1869,
Dostoevsky intended his novel to castigate the fanaticism of his
country's new revolutionaries, particularly those known as Nihilists.
Blackly funny, grotesque and shocking, it is a disturbing portrait of
five young men saturated in ideology and bent on destruction, and a
compelling study of terrorism
Fyodor Dostoevsky was born in Moscow on 11th November 1821. He had
six siblings and his mother died in 1837 and his father in 1839. He
graduated from the St Petersburg Academy of Military Engineering in 1846
but decided to change careers and become a writer. His first book, Poor
Folk, did very well but on 23rd April 1849 he was arrested for
subversion and sentenced to death. After a mock-execution his sentence
was commuted to hard labour in Siberia where he developed epilepsy. He
was released in 1854. His 1860 book, The House of the Dead was based on
these experiences. In 1857 he married Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva. After his
release he adopted more conservative and traditional values and rejected
his previous socialist position. In the following years he spent a lot
of time abroad, struggled with an addiction to gambling and fell deeply
in debt. His wife died in 1864 and he married Anna Grigoryeva Snitkina.
In the following years he published his most enduring and successful
books, includingCrime and Punishment (1865). He died on 9th February
1881.