The Idiot
| Fyodor Dostoevsky |
The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky (Penguin Classics) — Dostoevsky’s attempt to portray a truly good man in a corrupt world. Prince Myshkin’s Christ-like innocence collides with the self-destructive Nastasya and the passionate Rogozhin in a novel of extraordinary psychological intensity. Trans. David Magarshack.
| Penguin Classics | |
| რბილი ყდა | |
| ინგლისური |
45.00 ₾
მარაგში
| რაოდენობა | ფასი | ფასდაკლება |
|---|---|---|
| 3-9 | 38.25 ₾ | 15% |
| 10+ | 31.50 ₾ | 30% |
ანოტაცია
What would a truly good, truly innocent man look like in the corrupt world of nineteenth-century Russia? What would happen to him? Dostoevsky spent years trying to imagine a character of Christlike compassion and purity, and the result is Prince Myshkin — epileptic, guileless, incapable of social calculation, and constitutionally unable to look at any human being without feeling the full weight of their suffering.
Into this man’s life Dostoevsky introduces Nastasya Filippovna — one of literature’s most devastating characters, a woman of extraordinary beauty who has been destroyed by her own history and cannot accept love — and Rogozhin, who loves her with a passion that is indistinguishable from the desire for destruction. The collision between these three people generates one of the most emotionally overwhelming narratives in world literature.
Dostoevsky’s central question — whether goodness can survive in a fallen world, or whether it will simply be crucified by it — is never resolved. The novel ends in catastrophe. And yet it is also, somehow, a novel about the necessity of trying. David Magarshack’s translation is the standard English text. Published by Penguin Classics.
მახასიათებლები
| ავტორი | Fyodor Dostoevsky |
|---|---|
| გამომცემლობა | Penguin Classics |
| გვერდების რაიოდენობა | 667 |
| ISBN | 9780140447927 |
| ყდის ტიპი | რბილი ყდა |
| ენა | ინგლისური |
| ფორმატი | 198 x 129 mm |
















