Author:Fyodor Dostoyevsky,David McDuff,David McDuff
In January 1850 Dostoyevsky was sent to a remote Siberian prison camp for his part in a political conspiracy. The four years he spent there, startlingly re-created in The House of the Dead, were the most agonizing of his life. In this fictionalized account he recounts his soul-destroying incarceration through the cool, detached tones of his narrator, Aleksandr Petrovich Goryanchikov: the daily battle for survival, the wooden plank beds, the cabbage soup swimming with cockroaches, his strange ‘family’ of boastful, ugly, cruel convicts. Yet The House of the Dead is far more than a work of documentary realism: it is also a powerful novel of redemption, describing one man’s spiritual and moral death and the miracle of his gradual reawakening.
Expertly done
—— Daily MailA compelling book... [Jin] has a fine sense of the human scale of history and an eye for the absurd
—— Guardian[Jin's] new novel...again demonstrates his literary gifts
—— The TimesA fascinating tale told with skill and eloquence; a truly wonderful read
—— Publishing NewsThe Crazed...is a complicated web of human attachments. Like the best realist writers, Ha Jin sneaks emotional power into the plainest declarative sentences
—— New Yorker