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This book, first published in 1978, demonstrates how Dostoyevsky’s novels grew directly out of the pressures of their creator’s tormented experience and personality. It draws upon important fresh source material, and considers all Dostoyevsky’s works, the ideas they contain, their artistic success and critical reception.



This book, first published in 1978, demonstrates how Dostoyevsky’s novels grew directly out of the pressures of their creator’s tormented experience and personality. Ronald Hingley draws upon important fresh source material, which includes the definitive Soviet edition of Dostoyevsky’s works with drafts and variants, Soviet research on the circumstances of his father’s death, and a newly deciphered section of the diary of his second wife, Anna. Hingley considers with his analysis all Dostoyevsky’s works, the ideas they contain, their varying artistic success, and their contemporary critical reception. He convincingly present’s Dostoyevsky’s genius at its most powerful when most on the attack.

1. Boy and Youth
2. Cadet and Officer
3. Apprentice Author: Poor Folk
and The Double
4. Political Criminal
5. Convict and Exile: Uncles Dream and
The Village of Stepanchikovo
6. Memoirist and Journalist: Insulted and
Injured; Memoirs from the House of the Dead; and Memoirs from the Underground
7. Emerging Genius: Crime and Punishment and The Gambler
8. Reluctant
European: The Idiot
9. Scourge of Socialism: The Eternal Husband and Devils
10. Uneasy Compromiser: A Raw Youth
11. Arbiter of Destiny: The Diary of a
Writer
12. Man of the Hour: The Brothers Karamazov
Ronald Hingley