The Brothers Karamazov


Part I.

Part II.

Part III.

Part IV.


Book Reviews

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Reviewed by: Guy DeBook on October 1, 2005

Just a missing attribution. This is the Constance Garnett translation of the novel. By far my favorite. I don't know anything about Constance herself but I love her for the way she took my hand and led me into the story that lay behind all those crazy russian letters. I made a vow once that I'd reread the Brothers every Easter time. I didn't actually do that but it's nice that I thought I should.

Reviewed by: John Marcus on September 19, 2005

A gripping story the whole way through. While Dostoevsky does a good job at weaving the plot together, he also throws in many details about Russian life and gives insights about Atheism and the Roman Catholic Church. The characters mention God a number of times, but get it wrong so often. The monk "worshipped" by one of the characters, for example, promotes the idea that God is in you and is in everybody and denies that devils are real. Yet, it seems likely that Dostoevsky is recording what many in Russia actually believe. This book is worth reading, if only to get one's mind thinking.