Monday, July 2, 2012

Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

I really liked this book. To be more specific, I really liked the ending. There were times when the book was slow and parts where I felt like I was slogging through it because it was heavy reading (for me at least). It's pretty depressing throughout and I never like depressing books.

However, towards the end, the pace picked up and I really like the turn that Dostoevsky makes with how Raskolnikov changes. I feel like there were so many allusions to Christianity that it makes me wonder if this book is some kind of allegory to it or if it has some strong parallels to it.

In terms of the writing style, as with any author, I found it difficult to get into Dostoevsky but the way he creates flow is pretty interesting. He really gets into some details but I think it was well done and necessarily so. He portrayed Raskolnikov's mental state pretty well and the ideologies of each of the characters was well  executed.

As I mentioned before, the movement of the plot was slow (especially by the standards of popular novels nowadays) and sometimes I felt like it completely stagnated but perhaps Dostoevsky was trying to portray the stagnation of Raskolnikov's mind so it worked out in its own way.

Overall a decent read. It was heavy reading and I can see why high schoolers complain about how reading the book is "crime and punishment" (har har) but I also see the academic value in it. I want to come back to this novel some time but I would hesitate to recommend it to others because it isn't as accessible as a lot of other novels.