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Notes from a Dead House
Indigo
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Notes from a Dead House
By None
Current price: $1.34


By None
Notes from a Dead House
Current price: $1.34
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
First published in 1861, 'Notes from a Dead House' is a haunting and reflective account of life inside a Siberian prison camp, drawn from Fyodor Dostoevsky’s own experiences as a political prisoner. Told through the eyes of Alexander Petrovich, a nobleman convicted of murder, the novel offers a rare and unflinching look at the daily realities of prison life in 19th-century Russia.
Through a series of powerful sketches and character portraits, Dostoevsky explores the brutal conditions, rigid social hierarchy, and emotional toll of incarceration. Inmates range from hardened criminals to fallen intellectuals, and the narrative reveals both their darkest instincts and moments of surprising kindness. Rather than focusing on action or plot, the novel meditates on the nature of suffering, the possibility of redemption, and the unbreakable core of humanity even in the harshest circumstances.
With philosophical depth and psychological insight, 'Notes from a Dead House' stands as a unique and deeply personal work within Dostoevsky’s body of literature. It is a compelling exploration of the human spirit tested by confinement, and a profound precursor to the moral and existential themes that would define his later masterpieces.
First published in 1861, 'Notes from a Dead House' is a haunting and reflective account of life inside a Siberian prison camp, drawn from Fyodor Dostoevsky’s own experiences as a political prisoner. Told through the eyes of Alexander Petrovich, a nobleman convicted of murder, the novel offers a rare and unflinching look at the daily realities of prison life in 19th-century Russia.
Through a series of powerful sketches and character portraits, Dostoevsky explores the brutal conditions, rigid social hierarchy, and emotional toll of incarceration. Inmates range from hardened criminals to fallen intellectuals, and the narrative reveals both their darkest instincts and moments of surprising kindness. Rather than focusing on action or plot, the novel meditates on the nature of suffering, the possibility of redemption, and the unbreakable core of humanity even in the harshest circumstances.
With philosophical depth and psychological insight, 'Notes from a Dead House' stands as a unique and deeply personal work within Dostoevsky’s body of literature. It is a compelling exploration of the human spirit tested by confinement, and a profound precursor to the moral and existential themes that would define his later masterpieces.


















