Crime and Punishment

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Recommended By

Book Synopsis

"Crime and Punishment" by Fyodor Dostoevsky follows the story of Rodion Raskolnikov, a poor ex-student living in St. Petersburg, Russia. Disturbed by societal inequality and his own poverty, Raskolnikov devises a theory that certain extraordinary individuals are exempt from societal laws and can commit crimes for the greater good.

Motivated by this belief, he plans and executes the murder of a pawnbroker and her sister, which he deems as a necessary evil. However, haunted by guilt and paranoia, Raskolnikov begins to unravel mentally, experiencing nightmares and hallucinations.

As the investigation into the murder unfolds, Raskolnikov becomes entangled with various characters, including the persistent detective Porfiry Petrovich, his sympathetic friend Razumikhin, and the virtuous prostitute Sonya, who has been forced into her profession by poverty.

Through encounters with these individuals, Raskolnikov wrestles with his moral justification for the crime and gradually realizes the weight of his actions. He confesses his guilt to Sonya, who becomes his confidante and source of redemption.

In the end, Raskolnikov's internal struggle climaxes as he grapples with the consequences of his crime and his own fractured psyche. "Crime and Punishment" delves into themes of morality, guilt, and the consequences of acting upon radical ideologies, presenting an intense journey into the depths of the human psyche and the unavoidable punishment that guilt manifests.

Explore More Books

See All
On Drugs
Timelines of World History
The Internet of Money Volume 2
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
Structures
The Principia
Parasite Rex
The Bullish Case for Bitcoin
The Battle of Alcazar
Draft No. 4
The Alliance
The House of Getty
Rainbows End
Barbarian Days
The Three Body Problem
Stranger In A Strange Land
Play Bigger
The Starfish and the Spider
When Genius Failed
Norwegian Wood
Perilous Interventions
Resurrection From The Underground
Conflicted
Scientific Freedom
Hold 'em Poker
Trauma
T
Good Economics For Hard Times
The Benedict Option
Visual Explanations
Complexity and the Economy
The Paper Menagerie And Other Stories
Right Thing, Right Now
When Prophecy Fails
The Salmon of Doubt
Status Anxiety
Industrial-Strength Denial
The Dao of Capital
Bobby Kennedy
Origins of Political Order
Exit Interview
On Writing Well
Teddy and Booker T.
Solution Selling
Natural
Trade Is Not A Four Letter Word
Payoff
The Devil in the White City
Diet for a Small Planet
The Design of Everyday Things
The Second Machine Age
The Autobiography of Charles Darwin
Born To Run
Nobody Wants To Read Your Sh*t
Trade-Off
The Wizard of Menlo Park
The Man Without a Face
The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind
The 48 Laws of Power
The Wayfinders
Fast-Track Triathlete
The Story of Civilization: The Age of Reason Begins
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
The Blank Slate
All Out War
A Soldier of the Great War
Simple Rules
Six Not-So-Easy Pieces
Storm of Steel
Trailblazer
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
True Enough
A Wrinkle in Time
The Fault in Our Stars
Permutation City
The Friction Project
The Mind of Napoleon
Surface Detail
What Do People Do All Day?
Netflixed
Blueprint
Leading Without Authority
Smart People Should Build Things
The Great Illusion
Plan B 3.0
Linchpin
Manias, Panics, and Crashes
Reality Is Not What It Seems
Super Maker
Cultural Strategy
The Theory of Investment Value
Revolution in The Valley
State of the Art
Stone Age Economics
Fortune's Formula
Bad News
Memories, Dreams, Reflections
The Slow Midnight on Cypress Avenue
The Death of the Artist
Pasture Perfect