
The Brothers Karamazov is Fyodor Dostoevsky's final great novel, a family tragedy and philosophical drama centered on the Karamazov brothers, their father, and the crime that exposes every buried conflict. Dmitri, Ivan, Alyosha, and Smerdyakov embody clashing forms of desire, doubt, faith, resentment, and moral responsibility. The novel moves from domestic chaos to courtroom spectacle while never leaving the soul alone.
Readers drawn to Russian literature, religious questioning, and psychological fiction will find The Brothers Karamazov vast but intensely personal. Dostoevsky turns inheritance, lust, belief, and guilt into a single moral storm. Its greatness lies in making argument feel lived, as if every idea has blood, memory, and consequence attached. The result is both a murder story and a spiritual trial.
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