The Idiot - Fyodor Dostoevsky
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The Story
Prince Myshkin arrives in St. Petersburg with nothing but his kindness and a history of epilepsy. He's immediately swept up by distant relatives who see him as a harmless oddity. His life collides with two women at the center of high-society drama. Nastasya Filippovna is a celebrated beauty, deeply ashamed of her past as a kept woman and convinced she is ruined. Aglaya is a sharp, proud young woman from a good family. Myshkin feels a profound, compassionate love for the suffering Nastasya and a more conventional attraction to the brilliant Aglaya.
The plot spins on a series of explosive social gatherings, secret letters, and doomed engagements. A rich merchant, Rogozhin, burns with a violent, possessive passion for Nastasya, creating a dangerous love triangle. Myshkin, wanting only to save and heal, finds himself promising marriage to one woman while being in love with another, all while navigating a whirlpool of gossip, jealousy, and philosophical debates about faith, money, and what it means to be Russian.
Why You Should Read It
Forget the idea that Russian novels are just gloomy. This one is painfully human. Myshkin isn't a saint; he's a deeply awkward man whose goodness is a social handicap. You'll cringe for him, cheer for him, and sometimes want to shake him. The characters around him are brilliantly alive—vain, hilarious, desperate, and cruel. Dostoevsky puts them in rooms together and lets the social tension crackle.
What stuck with me wasn't just the plot, but the feeling of it. It captures the agony of wanting to do the right thing when every 'right thing' hurts someone. It’s about the loneliness of being truly different, and the terrible cost of compassion in a world that doesn't value it.
Final Verdict
This is for anyone who has ever felt out of step with the world, or who loves characters that feel more real than people you know. It's perfect for readers who don't mind a slow burn and enjoy novels driven by intense conversations and psychological depth over fast-paced action. If you've ever read a book and thought, 'But what are they all *feeling*?'—this is your next obsession. Just be prepared to have your heart wrung out by the end.
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Patricia Hernandez
2 months agoHaving read this twice, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. One of the best books I've read this year.
Steven Jones
1 year agoA bit long but worth it.
Betty Jones
11 months agoWithout a doubt, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. Absolutely essential reading.
Ashley Hill
4 months agoLoved it.