Dostoevsky: The Miraculous Years 1865-1871
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About this book
This volume the fourth of five planned in Joseph Franks widely acclaimed biography of Dostoevsky covers the six most remarkably productive years in the novelists entire career. It was in this short span of time that Dostoevsky produced three of his greatest novels--Crime and Punishment The Idiot and The Devils--and two of his best novellas The Gambler and The Eternal Husband. All these masterpieces were written in the midst of harrowing practical and economic circumstances as Dostoevsky moved from place to place frequently giving way to his passion for roulette. Having remarried and fled from Russia to escape importuning creditors and grasping dependents he could not return for fear of being thrown into debtors prison. He and his young bride who twice made him a father lived obscurely and penuriously in Switzerland Germany and Italy as he toiled away at his writing their only source of income. All the while he worried that his recurrent epileptic attacks were impairing his literary capacities. His enforced exile intensified not only his love for his native land but also his abhorrence of the doctrines of Russian Nihilism--which he saw as an alien European importation infecting the Russian psyche. Two novels of this period were thus an attempt to conjure this looming spectre of moral-social disintegration while The Idiot offered an image of Dostoevskys conception of the Russian Christian ideal that he hoped would take its place.
