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Notes from Underground; The Double

Notes from Underground; The Double

Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Author

Jesse Coulson - Translator

Jesse Coulson - Introduction by

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ISBN 9780140442526 | 288 pages | 30 Jul 1972 | Penguin Classics | 5.07 x 7.79in | 18 - AND UP
Summary of Notes from Underground; The Double Summary of Notes from Underground; The Double Reviews for Notes from Underground; The Double An Excerpt from Notes from Underground; The Double
‘It is best to do nothing! The best thing is conscious inertia! So long live the underground!’ Alienated from society and paralysed by a sense of his own insignificance, the anonymous narrator of Dostoyevsky’s groundbreaking Notes from Underground tells the story of his tortured life. With bitter sarcasm, he describes his refusal to become a worker in the ‘ant-hill’ of society and his gradual withdrawal to an existence ‘underground’. The seemingly ordinary world of St Petersburg takes on a nightmarish quality in The Double when a government clerk encounters a man who exactly resembles him – his double perhaps, or possibly the darker side of his own personality. Like Notes from Underground, this is a masterly study of human consciousness. Jessie Coulson’s introduction discusses the stories’ critical reception and the themes they share with Dostoyevksy’s great novels.


@TweetsFromUndegrnd An officer pushed me at a bar. I will find this pizda son of a bitch and maybe murder him slowly. I’m a bit of a sociopath, aren’t I?

From Twitterature: The World's Greatest Books in Twenty Tweets or Less

Notes from Underground, with its mood of intellectual irony and alienation, can be seen as the first modern novel … That sense of the meaningless of existence that runs through much of twentieth-century writing – from Conrad and Kafka, to Beckett and beyond – starts in Dostoyevsky’s work’ 
Malcolm Bradbury