“A few days ago, I was feeling unwell and read The House of the Dead. I had forgotten much of it, so I read it again, and I know of no finer novel in all of modern literature, including Pushkin. It is not its tone that astonishes me, but its point of view: sincere, natural, and full of compassion. It is a remarkable and deeply moving book. Yesterday I spent the entire day absorbed in it, with a pleasure I have not experienced in a long time. If you happen to see Dostoevsky, tell him that I love him.” (From a letter by Leo Tolstoy to the literary critic Nikolai Strakhov, dated September 26, 1880.) This novel is based on Fyodor Dostoevsky's own experience during his years of penal servitude in Siberia, though presented in fictional form as the memoir of a convict named Alexander Petrovich Goryanchikov, discovered after his death. Through the quiet, observant voice of its narrator, Dostoevsky gradually unveils a world long hidden behind the wooden palisades of a prison fortress. Within the camp, he encounters thieves, murderers, and men who seem to have lost everything. Yet Dostoevsky refuses to reduce them to a faceless, undifferentiated mass. Each individual is portrayed with extraordinary precision and without judgment—absurd yet heartbreaking, harsh yet eccentric, full of contradictions, yet never stripped of his humanity.
| Penulis | : | Fyodor Dostoyevsky |
|---|---|---|
| Penerbit | : | basabasi |
| Tahun terbit | : | 2026 |
| ISBN | : | - |
| Halaman | : | 380 |