Review: The Brothers Karamazov

The Brothers Karamazov

The Brothers Karamazov
By Fyodor Dostoevsky
Liveright Publishing, 9781324095101, May 2024, 928 pp.

The Short of It:

Immensely entertaining. Not what you’d expect.

The Rest of It:

Dostoevsky’s final, greatest novel, The Brothers Karamazov, paints a complex and richly detailed portrait of a family tormented by its extraordinarily cruel patriarch, Fyodor Pavlovich, whose callous decisions slowly decimate the lives of his sons–the eponymous brothers Karamazov–and lead to his violent murder. ~ Bookshop.org

This review is going to be very different from my others.

Three brothers:

  • Dmitri Karamazov – The eldest, dramatic
  • Ivan Karamazov – The middle brother, brilliant
  • Alexei (Aloysha) Karamazov – The youngest, a novice monk

One nasty father:

  • Fyodor Pavlovich Karamazov. a difficult sort

The Women:

  • Katerina Ivanovna, Dmitri’s abandoned fiancée
  • Grushenka, a fiery pistol of a woman and the object of desire for many

The murder:

Not a spoiler but Fyodor, the father makes some horrendous decisions and pits his two sons against one another. Dimitri and Ivan and their on-again, off-again admiration for these two women, Katerina and Grushenka, create the ongoing conflict throughout the novel that keeps the pages turning. At 928 pages, this is a good thing.

Money, also plays a huge role. Dmitri is often without any. He borrows and borrows from both his father and Katerina and finds himself begging for a handout wherever he can get one.

Ivan, not always in town, happens to spend some time with the “fam” and it just gets more complex from there.

Alexei (Aloysha), is a novice monk, truly a good soul trying to always make the best of things and doing his best to do damage control between his brothers and his father.

Eventually, all the action culminates into Fyodor’s murder. Who did it? It seems as if Dimitri did the deed. Especially since money has gone missing and there is supposedly a witness to him leaving the house.

The witness though, is unreliable and possibly Fyodor’s illegitimate son and servant. That’s right, Fyodor keeps Smerdyakov in his home but not as his son, but as his servant. So the motive is there. Could he have killed Fyodor?

There is a lot of drama between the women as they call each other beasts and monsters! Jealousy unlike anything you’ve seen. They both want what they can’t have. Their loyalties are all over the place. I wanted to slap them a few times.

The murder is tried in court. The lead-up to the court case is riveting. Dmitri is arrested and taken in. Ivan and Aloysha wring their hands over the entire thing. What can be done? It’s not looking good for Dmitri and honestly, he’s not helping his case with all of the romantic dramatics that follow along with his reputation for being a deadbeat. Would he kill his father for a lousy 3000 roubles?

The family story goes a little bit sideways at the introduction of a bullied schoolboy, Ilyusha. Aloysha encounters him one day as he is walking about town. The town boys are taunting him and Aloysha steps in to defend him. Aloysha’s brother insults Ilyusha’s father and the boy bites Aloysha in retaliation. Not long afterward, Ilyusha falls deathly  ill.

Without spoilers, the ending of the book is interesting. It’s not cut and dry and much is left to the reader’s own interpretation but the final pages are quite lovely. Overall, I enjoyed this romp through a classic that has long been on my list of must reads.

Source: Purchased
Disclosure: This post contains Bookshop.org affiliate links.

12 thoughts on “Review: The Brothers Karamazov”

    1. True. It was nearly 1000 pages but my only regret was choosing it for my first book of the year. I ended up reading a reviewing a few others while reading it because it took a while to go through it. But I enjoyed it every time I picked it up.

  1. Ti, so glad you enjoyed it. I just reread my posts on it and I ended my fourth post that I was glad to be done with the book. I guess I liked it, but didn’t love it. LOL!

    What other classics do you plan on reading?

    1. Now that I fell down the classics hole I am interested in these as well. Also, I just picked up Animal Farm again because, you know… this Elon stuff is very Napoleon like.

      I want to get to these classics:

      The Idiot 2. Crime and Punishment 3. Anna Karenina 4. War and Peace 5. To the Lighthouse

      I feel like there are more but my goodness, this is enough for awhile. Ha!

    1. That’s how it was for me. On my “books to read before I die” list and then I found myself in a hospital with a mango sized brain tumor and deadly pulmonary embolism. To say that it got pushed up on my list is an understatement.

  2. Congrats on finishing this long one! I haven’t done well with the two Russian novels that I tried to read.

  3. Way to go finishing this long chunkster! Your review makes it seem pretty exciting but I think I read half of this one long ago and didn’t like it much. But maybe I was too young to get it. Maybe I should try it again sometime. I liked Crime & Punishment quite a bit but this one I remember having trouble with it. But it could’ve been high school or maybe college. Is it suspenseful or compelling?

    1. That last third of the book is pretty suspenseful. I was pulled into all that family drama and then a murder! I really woke up then.

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