Crime and Punishment
discussion
Are there abridged versions?
date
newest »


No, no, I'm fairly certain there cannot and shall not ever be. No-one on the planet has the ill-judgement or the temerity.
Monte Cristo is a different kettle of fish.
Constance Garnett translation not abridged. Don't sweat.


Translations are arguable. She's not as bad as she's bagged out to be. I've heard from readers who still prefer her and make a case. I don't think we need put people off, when a lot of folk new to D. have her ebooks or cheap paperbacks.


I've seen other things said. Joseph Frank, who did the biography, wrote in 1976 (before P&V) "I have used the translations of Constance Garnett because she takes fewer liberties with the literal meaning than more recent translators."

Here's an abridged version of the post just above.
I mate. love and collect. Translation enormous. read side side spot differences. I've other said. Frank, did biography, in (before) "have the of Garnett she fewer with literal than recent."
Understood?


Agreed

And yeah, I don't know why they offer unabridged anything. I was pretty upset after I read a 600 page version of Monte Cristo and then found out the unabridged is like 1200-1400 pages. What bothers me is that they kinda include "unabridged" in the footnotes or in small text at the bottom. It should be clearly advertised as such. I wasted my time reading half of Monte Cristo.



I think more people would read Russian literature(WARNING: heresy!) if they changed all the 12-syllable names to "George" and "Sam" and "Mary," etc.---and I've studied Russian. The patronymics are bad enough, and the nicknames make it worse.
But abridgement is to be avoided at all cost.

I think the nicknames get easier once you get used to the Russian system, but it's true I usually recognize characters by the first 3 letters of each of their names and if it comes to talking about a book out loud I embarrass myself saying things like "Razmoonkin"

all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
There are 472 pages, 6 parts with part 6 having 8 chapters and an epilogue. Sound right?