Submitted by True-Abbreviations71 t3_z8zjhn in books

I was expecting a great read when I borrowed Dostoevskys "Notes from the underground" but when I started reading it felt like swimming through mud. I thought he was supposed to be a great thinker and author but now I'm not so sure on the author part. Pleas help me understand. I want to enjoy his work.

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chutton2012 t1_iyeaahl wrote

Dostoyevsky is widely considered one of the greatest authors of all time. I wouldn’t say it’s easy to read and it requires more thinking, not to mention it’s translated, but he’s definitely a great author. You might not like him though 🤷‍♂️

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RD__III t1_iyelkvo wrote

> I wouldn’t say it’s easy to read and it requires more thinking

This is my take. Crime & Punishment was good, but also a bit tough to read. I imagine some is lost in translation (as well as cultural assumptions that don't exist in the wester world)

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chutton2012 t1_iyenn92 wrote

Honestly I find a lot of literary classic tough reads. Which isn’t to say there are bad, it just requires a lot of brain power.

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RD__III t1_iyeo9x2 wrote

Which to me is sort of why they are classics. The books that really pay off the effort & give a lot back (even if they are tough to read) are the ones that get translated into a bunch of languages and stick around.

The "potato chip" reads come and go because it's not worth the effort to put yourself in a different time/place/language when the same quality can be had in the native language/culture.

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chutton2012 t1_iyeogas wrote

Good point of view. I like that. I definitely think they are worth the read like you said. I just go into it knowing like hey this isn’t gonna be a super seamless and easy read you’re gonna have to work for this one.

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True-Abbreviations71 OP t1_iyf523j wrote

I'm not saying i don't like him. I can't make that judgement of one book and a translated book aswell. I simply wanted some experienced to enlighten me

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MuchMethod7039 t1_iye7w56 wrote

You can dislike something or not understand it, but that doesn’t make the author “bad”. Seriously. If you don’t like it , it’s fine not to read that author.

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Handyandy58 t1_iyeddld wrote

I think that the broad opinion is that he is not a bad author. That doesn't mean you have to enjoy his work. Additionally, unless you're reading in the original Russian, you are reading a translation, which means you are also dealing with someone else's particular style and approach to writing and translating as well. If you're determined to read his work, you might try a different translator.

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True-Abbreviations71 OP t1_iyf5cy2 wrote

Am i right in assuming that a translation can be so different its like a different book?

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Aquila_chrysateos t1_iyfcgw5 wrote

this is a good question and the answer - it depends. But translation is critical to the nuances and impact of the book - e.g. Proust and translations; or Homer as another example. Sometimes can seem like a big difference - especially in the case of Dostoevsky.

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ProfMoses t1_iyega36 wrote

The context is important. He was spoofing a certain type of “revolutionary” who thought they could create their own values. His point is that rather than becoming supermen, they were becoming subhuman, human cockroaches. He deals with the same kind of delusional revolutionaries in many of his books, but Notes is the most extreme. I recommend reading it back to back with Kafka’s The Metamorphosis, about another human cockroach.

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Gallifreyanstorm t1_iye52ja wrote

Maybe he just takes time to get into, a lot of authors are an acquired taste

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csjohnson1933 t1_iye5w8m wrote

Is that the first thing you read by him? Everyone praises it, but I didn't enjoy it much when I read it. Try "The Double," "White Nights," or Crime and Punishment.

"White Nights" is the most beautiful of the three.

Also...what translation did you read?

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goya_enthusiast t1_iyee007 wrote

Take more time to digest the idea. Notes from the underground is a tough book. Let yourself be open to it.

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Shanks-Akagami t1_iyeyg8g wrote

Bad ? He's consideired one of the best ever and some do consider him the best

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True-Abbreviations71 OP t1_iyf5t1l wrote

That's why I am so confused. I expected to enjoy every page and that it would read like cutting through melted butter. But what i got was more like chopping through a wooden log with a butter knife

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twilightsagawebcomic t1_iyf7df2 wrote

I LOVE Dostoyevsky but I do not think that he is necessarily easy or even enjoyable to read. But I did find Crime and Punishment genuinely transformative and I learned a lot about how to write from him as well. I think the power of his work is less in the pace or the prose and more in the powerful concepts and how he carries the reader to new destinations

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boxer_dogs_dance t1_iye8gn0 wrote

People mean different things when they say a great read. Any book from before the 20th century is going to be slow. But people still appreciate paintings even though we now have television. The stories can be worth the effort.

But for classic novels I would start with something shorter like the death of Ivan Ilyich

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True-Abbreviations71 OP t1_iyf4pze wrote

Is it the case with every novel pre 1900 because i read Candide by Voltaire and it was the opposite of Dostojevsky in the sense that it was a very comfortable read

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boxer_dogs_dance t1_iyf832l wrote

There are always exceptions. It tends to be more universally true for books written originally in English. For translation the translator can choose a more modern style and vocabulary than a contemporary English speaking author would have used.

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Aquila_chrysateos t1_iyfdry2 wrote

No. Nyet.
Not a bad author - writer. Although not exactly a role model for upstanding human either. The novel - Notes from the Underground - is your literary gateway to thinking about the the dynamic of the "Self" rejecting the clouds of Platonism - but spending way too much time in the Cave - as a result the individual can be crushed "beneath the wheel" or make it out to the sun - but just barely. Hermann Hesse and 'Steppenwolf' running on similar themes.

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