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Writing before the Russian revolution, Conrad tries to elucidate Russia for the western reader. As such, you get some revolutionaries and bureaucrats, and a protagonist caught in between.
The strength of the book is what Conrad's strength often is, his ability to see into the hearts and minds of characters. In this case he is aiming to see into the psychology of Russia as a country, and hits a few bull's eyes. I think the characters suffer a bit from it, but in some ways it makes his points more ...more
The strength of the book is what Conrad's strength often is, his ability to see into the hearts and minds of characters. In this case he is aiming to see into the psychology of Russia as a country, and hits a few bull's eyes. I think the characters suffer a bit from it, but in some ways it makes his points more ...more

Gets a bit ragged toward the end, but an amazingly prophetic novel, much like Dostoevsky's Demons.
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Jan 31, 2009
Inna
marked it as to-read


Jan 25, 2011
Mike
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Oct 07, 2011
Juniper
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
to-acquire,
literature

Jan 05, 2012
Jim
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Jul 05, 2013
Misha
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
literary-fiction,
mystery-suspense-thriller,
20th-century,
british,
classics,
wishlist,
russia

Sep 18, 2014
Jonathan
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Aug 17, 2017
Susan
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Sep 10, 2017
Derrick
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May 21, 2020
Roger
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