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The Brothers Karamazov - Community Reviews back

by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Tim Pigott-Smith
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JasonKoivu
JasonKoivu rated it 15 years ago
Oh brother Karamazov, where art thou? The split up of the family Karamazov affected me more than all the philosophizing and high-minded ethical discussion. But that's me. I'm more interested in seeing human nature played out rather than hearing a bunch of people sit around talking about how humans ...
lonesomepoint
lonesomepoint rated it 15 years ago
I am not sure what to say of this marvelous novel except to echo the last line: "Hurrah for Karamazov!"Some quotations:"Ah, children, ah, dear friends, don't be afraid of life! How good life is when one does something good and just!""I tell you plainly and openly, dear boy, every decent man ought to...
Timmeloche
Timmeloche rated it 15 years ago
I have tried to finish this book many times. This is one book I would like to finish to say I did. I fear this book may be marked as "to read" for many more years to come. It is a tough read with dense dialogue...or at least it seemed that way when I first started trying to read this ten years ag...
That's What She Read
That's What She Read rated it 15 years ago
"Please forgive me a few minutes of gloating over my success at having finished this book. It's been like a millstone around my neck for years now, as I've picked up and put down this book three times now before I finally made it through to the end of the book. It was the only book I have ever put...
Uncertain, Fugitive, Half-fabulous
Uncertain, Fugitive, Half-fabulous rated it 15 years ago
This was part of the same class in which I read almost all of War and Peace, which I just finished. Unlike War and Peace, though, I didn't get too far in Brothers Karamazov, and looking back now I don't feel that I remember the book well enough to pick up from where I left off. It wasn't the book's ...
PhilJames
PhilJames rated it 15 years ago
Audio book. Horrible voice of the narrator put me off it.
Dr Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets
Dr Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets rated it 20 years ago
great translators! They've translated everything by Dostoevsky and they are amazing. I started reading this and took my time -- but then had to read stuff for school! So, i only got half way and it's been 2 years. I'll have to start over, but I won't mind at all.
wealhtheow
wealhtheow rated it 25 years ago
I read this while in high school, with no real context for it (beyond the other Dostoyevsky, Turgenev, etc that I was also reading), so I'm sure I missed huge swathes of it. Nevertheless, I really liked it. I wish he'd edited a bit, though--40 pages for one monologue seems a bit much, particularly...
SJane
SJane rated it 29 years ago
I'm terribly ashamed of course. I gave it the old college try. I even gave it the graduate school try. I was badgered by my father, but still I couldn't finish it.
TatianaBoshenka
TatianaBoshenka rated it 38 years ago
Rereading this one now, first time as a believer, and the whole story of the monk, Aloysha's friend and mentor, is riveting to me this time around. I've had a few times in my life when I felt the way it was described that the monk's brother felt before he died, that there's no need for any unhappine...
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