Reading the Classics discussion
Past Group Reads
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Crime and Punishment - Part 3+4 - until April 24th
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The scene at the police station where he's being accused and not accused at the same time was rather odd. The detective seemed a bit maniacal himself, or at least very jittery. He doesn't seem like any Hercule Poirot, that's for sure.
And what about this poor soul who's confessed to the crime? What do we make of that? Is it, as Raskolnikov says, that he's been badgered by the police so much that he really does think he committed the crime?
Russian names always confuse me so much in novels. Am I right that Pyotr Petrovich and Luzhin are the same person? I assume Luzhin is a nickname? But why go back and forth from the formal name to the nickname, while in the midst of an argument, from a narrator's standpoint?
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