The Russian Novel

The Russian Novel

In the second half of the 19th century, Russian literature produced a concentration of genius unmatched in any national tradition. These eight novels form the core of Russian literature courses worldwide. Listen free on HearCandy.

Dead Souls cover
Dead Souls
Nikolai Gogol
A con man travels Russia buying the legal records of dead serfs. Gogol’s 1842 satirical novel invented the tradition of grotesque Russian comedy — Kafka, Bulgakov, and Nabokov all start here.
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Fathers and Sons cover
Fathers and Sons
Ivan Turgenev
A young nihilist comes home from university and argues with everyone. Turgenev’s 1862 novel coined the word ‘nihilism’ and perfectly captured the Russian generational conflict of its era.
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Crime and Punishment cover
Crime and Punishment
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
A student murders two women to test his theory that extraordinary men are above morality. What follows is one of the most psychologically intense explorations of guilt ever written.
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War and Peace, Vol. 1 cover
War and Peace, Vol. 1
Leo Tolstoy
Russia, 1805–1807. As Napoleon’s army moves east, five aristocratic families — Bezukhovs, Bolkonskys, Rostovs, Drubetskoys, Kuragins — fall in love, fight, scheme, and try to understand what they are living through. Maude translation, the one Tolstoy himself approved.
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War and Peace, Vol. 2 cover
War and Peace, Vol. 2
Leo Tolstoy
Through the brief peace of 1807–1812, Pierre wrestles with Freemasonry, Andrei searches for meaning, Natasha becomes a woman, and Russia drifts toward war.
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War and Peace, Vol. 3 cover
War and Peace, Vol. 3
Leo Tolstoy
Napoleon invades. The novel pivots to Borodino, the burning of Moscow, and Tolstoy’s central argument: that history is not made by great men.
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War and Peace, Vol. 4 cover
War and Peace, Vol. 4
Leo Tolstoy
Retreat, partisan warfare, captivity, and the final philosophy of the novel: that the truth of life is found in ordinary love and quiet survival, not in armies or ideas.
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The Idiot cover
The Idiot
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Prince Myshkin is purely good — and his goodness destroys everything around him. Dostoyevsky’s 1869 novel asks what happens when a genuinely Christlike person enters ordinary society.
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Anna Karenina cover
Anna Karenina
Leo Tolstoy
Tolstoy opens with a perfect sentence and never lets up. Anna’s affair and its consequences unfold against the full texture of Russian aristocratic and rural life. Complete Dole translation — one of the great novels.
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The Brothers Karamazov cover
The Brothers Karamazov
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Three brothers, a murdered father, and every question about God, free will, and human nature that Dostoyevsky had spent his life asking. His final novel and his greatest.
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The Death of Ivan Ilyich cover
The Death of Ivan Ilyich
Leo Tolstoy
A magistrate dies slowly and realizes his life has been a lie. Tolstoy’s 1886 novella is the shortest and most devastating work in this collection — read it in one sitting.
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