Notes from Underground (Read Red)
by Fyodor Dostoevskypublished
October 5th 2006
(first published 1864)
by Penguin Books Ltd
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binding
Paperback, 160 pages
isbn
0141024917
(isbn13: 9780141024912)
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Torments and Tormenticules: A Review of Notes from Underground
“The sauce here consisted of contradiction and suffering, of tormenting inner analysis, and all of these torments and tormenticules…”
All of Dostoevsky’s books are uncomfortable. Entering the thoughts of one of his antiheroes is like donning a hair shirt. Or perhaps that assessment is too harsh, because in spite of the discomfort there is something enjoyable about reading Dostoevsky that comes from the quick and cunning s...more
“The sauce here consisted of contradiction and suffering, of tormenting inner analysis, and all of these torments and tormenticules…”
All of Dostoevsky’s books are uncomfortable. Entering the thoughts of one of his antiheroes is like donning a hair shirt. Or perhaps that assessment is too harsh, because in spite of the discomfort there is something enjoyable about reading Dostoevsky that comes from the quick and cunning s...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
writers and poets
Notes from Underground is one of the most challenging little books I've read since my stint with Faulkner a few years ago. Dostoyevsky demands your complete attention. This book is no typical fun, summer read. However, if you stick with it, some of Dostoyevsky's insights into the human condition will not only make you say "that's me!" (though you probably won't admit it), they might even make you laugh.
One of the reasons this book is so difficult is due to the narrator. He is obvi...more
One of the reasons this book is so difficult is due to the narrator. He is obvi...more
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Read in January, 2002
I do not know where to begin. . .
First, I must ask that you note the edition I chose and thus the translation. I own two copies of Notes and I believe the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation to be far superior for reasons that I cannot justify. It is a matter of tone, of feeling, and so, is surely subjective. But if you've ever read two different translations of the same text, you'll understand just how much a translator's hand smears the prose. It's enough to make this burgeoning lover...more
First, I must ask that you note the edition I chose and thus the translation. I own two copies of Notes and I believe the Pevear and Volokhonsky translation to be far superior for reasons that I cannot justify. It is a matter of tone, of feeling, and so, is surely subjective. But if you've ever read two different translations of the same text, you'll understand just how much a translator's hand smears the prose. It's enough to make this burgeoning lover...more
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A chilling story that managed to terrify at certain points. Dostoevsky's narrator develops a startling contempt for the world, which leads him to withdraw to the Underground. The narrator has come to believe that "to be overly conscious is a sickness, a real, thorough sickness. For man's everyday use, ordinary human consciousness would be more than enough; that is, a half, a quarter of the portion that falls to the lot of a developed man in our unfortunate nineteenth century..." As...more
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Read in October, 2007
I read this book back as a Freshman and I really enjoyed it, but I don't think I understood it much at all. For example, the second part of the book is titled "Apropos of Wet Snow" and I had no idea what "apropos of" meant, much less what the importance of the wet snow was. This time through the book I looked up apropos and learned that it's an adverb, adjective and a preposition (when used with "of"). In this case it means "concerning". As for the wet...more
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Read in July, 2008
I have long felt that the list of works that I have read was horribly deficient because in contained no Russian Literature. During my last trip to the library I attempted to rectify that by picking it this work, mainly because it looks so much less intimidating that something like “Anna Karenina” or “Crime and Punishment.” Plus, it was only 130 pages. As I have long known, not all 130 pages are built the same. Not that I didn’t like the book, quite the contrary, it is just that the...more
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Read in January, 1986
I am a sick man. . . .I am a spiteful man. An unattractive man. I think that my liver hurts.
So it begins as many people know. Some might say this is a serious book, or that the main character is seriously screwed up. Some may say this book is a sad book. Some might say this is the first modernist existential book to hit the shelves. Some might think it is thin and spiteful. While I won't disagree, I will add that this book cracks me up, as in double over while chuckling. It's like a f...more
So it begins as many people know. Some might say this is a serious book, or that the main character is seriously screwed up. Some may say this book is a sad book. Some might say this is the first modernist existential book to hit the shelves. Some might think it is thin and spiteful. While I won't disagree, I will add that this book cracks me up, as in double over while chuckling. It's like a f...more
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“I am a sick man. ... I am a spiteful man. I am an unattractive man. I believe my liver is diseased. However, I know nothing at all about my disease, and do not know for certain what ails me. I don't consult a doctor for it, and never have, though I have a respect for medicine and doctors. Besides, I am extremely superstitious, sufficiently so to respect medicine, anyway (I am well-educated enough not to be superstitious, but I am superstitious). No, I refuse to consult a doctor from spi...more
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Read in May, 2003
recommends it for:
_ The Chosen .
What would a bottle of vodka say if it could talk?
In this, my favorite of all books, the volcanic surge of a man's emotions takes readers on a roller-coaster ride that yanks from one issue to the next with blinding speed and intense prose over the course of a brief 150 pages.
In it, Dostoyevsky explores the ideas and problems facing people of his day, and hence all humanity. The technique by which he does it is exceptional. He divides the book, the first part raising the common thread of...more
In this, my favorite of all books, the volcanic surge of a man's emotions takes readers on a roller-coaster ride that yanks from one issue to the next with blinding speed and intense prose over the course of a brief 150 pages.
In it, Dostoyevsky explores the ideas and problems facing people of his day, and hence all humanity. The technique by which he does it is exceptional. He divides the book, the first part raising the common thread of...more
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Read in January, 2005
I first read this novel in college during a period of especially intense teenage intellectual angst. I don't remember why I picked it up; it was a whim. Immediately I recognized the narrator.
Dostoevsky's unnamed narrator/protagonist is intelligent, sensitive, idealistic -- and morally paralyzed. His intellect and pride, rather than freeing him from the grubbiness of society, have trapped him inside himself. He is unwilling to share his life with less thoughtful people, but this has just ...more
Dostoevsky's unnamed narrator/protagonist is intelligent, sensitive, idealistic -- and morally paralyzed. His intellect and pride, rather than freeing him from the grubbiness of society, have trapped him inside himself. He is unwilling to share his life with less thoughtful people, but this has just ...more
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My movement through 19th Century Russia continues with this pamphlet thin bit of existentialism which I could have sworn I read sometime in the past...but alas, no. Sooooo boring. Damn! I was completely psyched for this and I like Doestoevski and his characters and his pyschological depths and Notes From The Underground started off great, I mean "I am a sick man..I am a spiteful man", what can be more truthful? ...more
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Read in January, 1998
There were so many thought-provoking ideas, but at the same time so many contradictions that I tired at attempting an interpretation. Then I realized that the character really wasn't trying to say anything. He was examining his mind, or the mind of some other-just trying to see what comes from a reasoning mind. The fact that too many questions and logical contradictions flow out when a mind is highly conscious. We work so hard to attain unto knowledge, maybe not realizing that our knowledge is ...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
civilization's discontents
Dostoevsky's Underground Man promises to be the life of any party.
Over the course of this thin little book, the unnamed protagonist swirls through self-conscious agonies and flights of egotism, never afraid to contradict himself or lay bare his own self-loathing. One part book-bound Don Quixote, and one part George Costanza, this insecure little bureaucrat rages against his lot as one of the rabblement, but is completely impotent to meaningfully exercise his will. Through the intellectual la...more
Over the course of this thin little book, the unnamed protagonist swirls through self-conscious agonies and flights of egotism, never afraid to contradict himself or lay bare his own self-loathing. One part book-bound Don Quixote, and one part George Costanza, this insecure little bureaucrat rages against his lot as one of the rabblement, but is completely impotent to meaningfully exercise his will. Through the intellectual la...more
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Read in January, 1997
i actually laughed a lot while reading this book. the part that sticks out most in my mind after all these years is when the main character gets tired of this big bully in town. whenever the main character passes the bully on the street he has to move over. after suffering through many encounters with the bully, the main character decides that he is going to walk by the bully without getting out of his way. so he spends the last of his money on a nice suit and hat, and then he sets the date ...more
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This book is one of the short stories from the book club I am in. I will give a more extensive review when I am finished...
Okay, I finished Notes, and I found it interesting. There are so many things that could be said from Dost.'s critique on naturalism in the first part to the critique on using books as an escape from real life in the second part. His unorthodox style of stream-of-consciousness with self-interruptions and all is interesting, and probably has significance. One commentator s...more
Okay, I finished Notes, and I found it interesting. There are so many things that could be said from Dost.'s critique on naturalism in the first part to the critique on using books as an escape from real life in the second part. His unorthodox style of stream-of-consciousness with self-interruptions and all is interesting, and probably has significance. One commentator s...more
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Read in January, 2008
I had to finally read this book, if only to find out what people were talking about.
What people? Well, you know, people....
It was a painful experience, yet at the same time strangely cathartic. With the first part of this short book a generalized rant against the failings of persons other than the narrator, entirely without specifics or concrete examples to illustrate his points, I wondered for how long I would be able to stay attentive. But then the second, and much longer, part is the ...more
What people? Well, you know, people....
It was a painful experience, yet at the same time strangely cathartic. With the first part of this short book a generalized rant against the failings of persons other than the narrator, entirely without specifics or concrete examples to illustrate his points, I wondered for how long I would be able to stay attentive. But then the second, and much longer, part is the ...more
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Read in July, 2007
"I am a sick man... I am a wicked man. An unattractive man. I think my liver hurts."
I first read Notes from Underground as a very serious college student; then in my 30s in my merry flaneur stage. Reading it a third time in Pevear and Volokhonsky's excellent translation has been a bit of a shock. What I first read as a profound existential tract now strikes me as a cartoon. Still, Dostoevsky's parody of an impoverished resentful intellectual ("a foul, obscene fly...more
I first read Notes from Underground as a very serious college student; then in my 30s in my merry flaneur stage. Reading it a third time in Pevear and Volokhonsky's excellent translation has been a bit of a shock. What I first read as a profound existential tract now strikes me as a cartoon. Still, Dostoevsky's parody of an impoverished resentful intellectual ("a foul, obscene fly...more
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Read in April, 2008
Full of gobbets. A short, extremely deep novel which I'm still working on absorbing. Supposedly paved the way for Nietzche, et al. I don't know enough about Dostoyevsky to know whether or not he's endorsing such concepts as moral relativism, or attacking realism and neoclassical ideals of the eighteenth century, but I find myself wanting to jot down some of the Underground Man's observations in a notebook and spout it out sometime at a cocktail party (once I start going to cocktail parties, obvi...more
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Read in April, 2005
recommends it for:
erybody
I make the kids in my math class read a few parts of this book. Specifically, I make them read the underground man's diatribe against mathematics. It is nice that the discussion of the phrase "two and two make five" inverts the examination of the same phrase in 1984. At risk of over-simplifying the significance of the two discussions, I might say: 1. The underground man feels as though rationality is often a tyrant, and true freedom lies in the ability to ignore the rational. 2. ...more
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