

Buy The Best Short Stories of Fyodor Dostoevsky by Dostoevsky, Fyodor, Magarshack, David online on desertcart.ae at best prices. ✓ Fast and free shipping ✓ free returns ✓ cash on delivery available on eligible purchase. Review: Haven’t been able to find this exact collection anywhere else for this price Review: I am a huge lover of Dostoevsky and his work. I've made my way through several of his lengthy novels and then picked up this collection of short stories, mostly because of Notes from Underground. I was very surprised by how different his tone can be in these short stories than in his deep, thought-provoking, emotional novels. There are a few short stories which are romantic in sense, my favourite being White Nights. The story itself is very simple and I love the way Dostoevsky uses rich words to tell a simple tale. He is extensive with details, without being boring, and he is a painter of language-- though these are translations. What I love most about Dostoevsky and his work is his portrayal of Russia and the Russian people. From reading several of his works, you get a true feel of Russian life and society and it is amazing. He truly brings you into his stories and you're off onto an eventful journey. Most of his themes are political and controversial, but he retains his elegance in tone throughout. If you're having trouble plowing through some of his extensive works, I suggest starting with the short stories. This is a great collection of stories and they proudly exhibit Dostoevky's great talent.

| Best Sellers Rank | #57,637 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #38 in Russian & Soviet Literature #220 in Fiction Classics for Young Adults #340 in Short Stories & Anthologies |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (216) |
| Dimensions | 12.95 x 1.73 x 20.07 cm |
| Edition | New edition |
| ISBN-10 | 0375756884 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0375756887 |
| Item weight | 238 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 320 pages |
| Publication date | 13 February 2001 |
| Publisher | Modern Library Inc |
H**Y
Haven’t been able to find this exact collection anywhere else for this price
K**Y
I am a huge lover of Dostoevsky and his work. I've made my way through several of his lengthy novels and then picked up this collection of short stories, mostly because of Notes from Underground. I was very surprised by how different his tone can be in these short stories than in his deep, thought-provoking, emotional novels. There are a few short stories which are romantic in sense, my favourite being White Nights. The story itself is very simple and I love the way Dostoevsky uses rich words to tell a simple tale. He is extensive with details, without being boring, and he is a painter of language-- though these are translations. What I love most about Dostoevsky and his work is his portrayal of Russia and the Russian people. From reading several of his works, you get a true feel of Russian life and society and it is amazing. He truly brings you into his stories and you're off onto an eventful journey. Most of his themes are political and controversial, but he retains his elegance in tone throughout. If you're having trouble plowing through some of his extensive works, I suggest starting with the short stories. This is a great collection of stories and they proudly exhibit Dostoevky's great talent.
C**O
Great collection of Dostoyevsky’s short stories. Easy way to get introduced to him as an author and some of his best works.
G**N
BOOK REVIEW – THE BEST SHORT STORIES OF FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY PART 1 In the introduction to his translation of ‘The Best Short Stories of Fyodor Dostoevsky’ David Magarshack observes that it is in Dostoevsky’s smaller works that we find the highest expression of his creative power and profundity of thought. The selection of stories in this book include – White Nights The Honest Thief The Christmas Tree and a Wedding The Peasant Marey Notes from the Underground A Gentle Creature The Dream of A Ridiculous Man. My reading of Dostoevsky so far had been limited to his three major novels – Crime and Punishment, The Brothers Karamazov, The Idiot and the shorter novellas The Possessed and Notes from the Underground (included above in the short stories) These stories are so distinct and still so interconnected that the full force of Dostoevsky’s thought processes so elaborated in his more famous longer novels are brought out here with such impact that I thought that to do justice to this collection of the best short stories it would be necessary to review each story individually and as such I thought I should do it over a series of posts on this blog. WHITE NIGHTS – A sentimental love story – From the memoirs of a dreamer And was it his destined part Only one moment in his life To be close to your heart ….. – Ivan Turgenev White Nights is a story spread over four nights about a lonely man (the narrator) and his unrequited love for a young woman whom he befriends one night while she is waiting for the return of her lover to be reunited with him. This is a simple story and in fact was adapted as the underlying theme for the Hindi Film ‘Saawariya’ by Sanjay Leela Bhansali. Dostoevsky’s story however delves deep into the psyche of the lonely man – a man who had shut himself off from human relationships and seemed to be more at ease with the inanimate objects around him; a man who had withdrawn himself into a shelf of self-pity and deprecation. Like most of Dostoevsky’s novels the story is told in first person by a nameless narrator – “When I woke up in the morning I felt strangely depressed, a feeling I could not shake for the better part of the day. All of a sudden it seemed to me as though I, the solitary one, had been forsaken by the whole world, and the whole world would have nothing to do with me.” He feels more comfortable walking the streets of St. Petersburg at night for during the day though he was never in the habit of interacting with anyone he used to connect emotionally with the faces he encountered and felt uneasy when they were absent or he came across new faces. At night he felt alone and happy and was surrounded always by the things he knew, the houses as he walked down the streets. They seemed to talk to him. He says – “The houses too are familiar to me. When I walk along the street, each of them seems to run before me, gazing at me out of all its windows and practically saying to me, “Good morning, sir! How are you? I’m very well, thank you. They are going to add another storey to me in May”; or, how do you do, sir? I’m going to be repaired tomorrow”. And so on. He says some of them are great favourites of his and good friends. White Nights is to a large extent considered autobiographical of a young Dostoevsky’s personal impressions during his own nocturnal wanderings in Petersburg. As they exchange their stories the protagonist finds himself falling in love with the young woman Nastenka. A lonely man at last finds there is someone actually real who has evoked this feeling of being wanted, for all the while he has been inside his self-imposed cocoon of solitude. His feelings are very clear when he says – “I know you’ll hardly believe me, but I’ve never spoken to any woman, never! Never known one either! I only dream that someday I shall meet someone at last. Oh, if only you knew how many times I’ve fallen in love like that!” While Nastenka does develop feelings for him she never does acknowledge that she loves him and at the end on the fourth night when the young man whom she had been in love, and for whom she was waiting, does appear she goes away with him after giving our protagonist a letter where she states she will always love him as a dear friend. The narrator ends by saying “Good Lord, only a moment of bliss? Isn’t such a moment sufficient for the whole of a man’s life?” But perhaps the most telling passage in the story and which brings forth the angst of existence and by which I can surmise that therein lies the foundation of the whole of Dostoevsky’s philosophy and a forerunner of Existentialism is when he tells Nastenska – “And you ask yourself - where are your dreams? And you shake your head and murmur; how quickly time flies! And you ask yourself again – what have you done with your time, where have you buried the best years of your life? Have you lived your life or not? Look, you say to yourself, look how everything in the world is growing cold. Some more year will pass, and they will be followed by cheerless solitude, and then will come tottering old age, with its crutch, and after it despair desperation. Your fantastic world will fade away, your dreams will wilt and die, scattering like yellow leaves from the trees. Oh, Nastenka, what can be more heartbreaking than to be left alone, all alone, and have nothing, absolutely nothing, because all you’ve lost was nothing, nothing but a silly round zero, nothing but an empty dream!” (Book Review – to be continued)
I**.
The greatest writer in all Russian times, better than Turgenev, Tolstoy and Pasternak, in my humble opinion. The short novels of Doestoevsky are as profound as its lengthy counterparts in describing how a man deals with absurd scenarios when he was hurled to a world full of hostility and estrangement. A book with careful collection of Doestoevsky's great short novels.
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