The Idiot

The Idiot


Unabridged

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What happens when perfect goodness confronts a corrupt world? Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Idiot (1869) poses this devastating question through one of literature's most extraordinary characters: Prince Myshkin, a man so pure of heart that society can only regard him as a fool.

Returning to Russia after treatment for epilepsy in Switzerland, Myshkin enters St. Petersburg with the radical notion that human beings can be redeemed through love and compassion. His Christ-like innocence draws him into the lives of two remarkable women: Nastasya Filippovna, a beauty shattered by abuse and betrayal, and Aglaya Epanchin, torn between convention and fierce independence. What follows is a tragedy that ranks among Dostoevsky's greatest achievements.

Myshkin's very existence becomes a mirror reflecting the moral compromises, jealousies, and desperate hungers of those around him. His inability to navigate social ambition and desire makes him simultaneously the most innocent and most dangerous person in every room he enters.

Set against 1860s Russian high society-a world where old certainties are crumbling and new philosophies promise salvation or destruction-Dostoevsky weaves together faith and doubt, love and possession, sacrifice and self-destruction with psychological insight that feels startlingly modern.

This is a novel that asks whether goodness itself might be a form of madness, and whether compassion, forgiveness, and selfless love are compatible with survival in an unforgiving world.

For readers willing to confront these questions, The Idiot offers one of literature's most rewarding and heartbreaking experiences-a masterpiece that challenges our assumptions about virtue, suffering, and what it means to be human.