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Crimen y castigo
Crimen y castigo
Crimen y castigo
Libro electrónico169 páginas2 horas

Crimen y castigo

Calificación: 4.5 de 5 estrellas

4.5/5

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Información de este libro electrónico

Un crimen y el amor que lo cambia todo. Un estudiante que no llega a fin de mes. Un asesinato que podría solucionarle la vida. Un hacha a su alcance. Fedor Dostoyesvski escribió Crimen y Castigo en 1866... ¿Sigues pensando que los clásicos son cosa del pasado?
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Fecha de lanzamiento1 mar 2011
ISBN9788467549348

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Comentarios para Crimen y castigo

Calificación: 4.251043362177756 de 5 estrellas
4.5/5

8,146 clasificaciones167 comentarios

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  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    Having finished part 1: I think this is to some extent like a past-age 'Dexter' a look inside the mind of a murderer. Unlike this Dexter this guy seems like a bit of an idiot, as much as he thinks of himself as a bit of a criminal-mastermind, he comes off a bit more like one of 'regular criminals' that he despises. The writing is great describing very interesting characters and setting up lots of interesting and contrasting ideas that you can sense will be leveraged to illustrate the nature of the main character. I'm loving it and am very keen to read on.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    Very Russian
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov commits murder. And we learn of his mental anguish. He isn't a particularly likeable character. Yet his story is very interesting. It does make it keep your interest.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Read and pieced together 3 different versions totaling about 621 pages (see wikipedia for explanations of why so many versions) Russian writing at its best. Written after Dostoevsky returned from Siberian gulag; although this is not what the book is about. The book attempts to both solidify and crumble notions that one has about philosophy and the nature of sin. Great read! 621 pages
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    Interesting ideas about how people punish themselves and how they can be reborn, but confusing and a lot of random things
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    F.D. had a window into the human soul. This is an incredibly good novel.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    A classic piece of fiction which is both deep and disturbing. A pefect choice for a book club to discuss.
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    I read this so long ago I don't remember much. I've got to reread this at some point. It's what got me into surfacey Russian lit though.
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    I loved and hated it at the same time. It was hard to get into the story as I mixed up the names all the time and it took me ages to get through. But I'm glad I finished it...
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Amazing book with a true grasp on human psychology
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    Raskolnikov, an impoverished former student in St. Petersburg spends a 100ish pages deciding whether or not to commit a murder and then another 500ish pages going in various mental circles about whether or not to turn himself in after he does commit the murder.The writing here is well done and the translation is also excellent as it doesn't have that stilted and removed feeling I've noted in several translated novels I've read recently. I can see why it's an enduring classic but I was kind of hate reading long passages of this. There are many sections where paragraphs stretch across multiple pages, which is exhausting to read, particularly when spending so much time inside the head of a character whose thoughts are convoluted but also circular. Also, Dostoyevsky's female characters often serve as little more than window dressing with no real careful examination of their internal lives. If you're on a classics kick, this isn't a terrible read but it isn't one I'll ever recommend.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    Great psychological novel.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    Ordinary vs superior people.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Classic. Story of one man who commits a murder to see if he can get away with it and the effects it has on everyone
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Loved it!
    (That's it. I don't review obviously great books)
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    The psyche is the focus of this amazingly well-crafted story, not the plot line. Dostoyevsky does a simply incredible job of illuminating Raskolnikov, and I am very glad to have read it.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    This novel is simultaneously utterly epic and beautifully intimate. Dostoevsky's ability to dredge out the human condition is, for me, almost unrivaled in all of literature. Like all great books it speaks to all people in all times, and is both dark and loving. Simply brilliant!
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Raskolnikov - the myth.'To be a Raskolnikov without a reason' - story of his life: E.M. Cioran.Depressing masterpiece, a very tasteful lecture though. I've always been fascinated by the influence of this character in the world's literature of the XXth century. Years ago, worked hard on a personal project: revealing Dostoievski's influence on the Romanian literature (Rebreanu - The Forest of the Hanged). Should have finished it... kept on thinking no one else would care to ever go through it.Winter/Northern literature; no way to read such a thing during the summer.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    The last half is better than the first, which is messily discursive and, when it attempts humor, annoying. Parts of the book feel written in a hurry, which in fact they were. The ending is a sop tacked on for the readers of the magazine where it was first published, and this seriously hurts the narrative arc of the novel. But you have to admire D's ability to capture the broad solidity of a people and time.
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    I'm glad I've read it. However, I wish I had read it in my 20s or 30s, I would have appreciated it more. Right now, I simply had no patience for all the mental dialogues and angst and no sympathy whatsoever for Raskolnikov. His sister now, she's another story! One of the best drawn women in fiction I have ever read. Obviously the writing is very fine, that's why my daughter made me read this; it just isn't something which made my soul soar, more like made my soul sore.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment stands as one of literatures greatest explorations of the human psyche, well the base part of that psyche. There is not much that is pleasant in the world of Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov. Following his planned murder of the pawnbroker Alena Ivanovna and the subsequent murder of Lizaveta , the sister who stumbles into the scene of the crime we are propelled through his swirling half mad mind.In a series of set pieces he attempts to rationalise and understand his behaviour whilst simultaneously dealing with the usual criminal issues of guilt, paranoia and abjection.Murder, alcoholism, mental illness, child cruelty, domestic abuse, etc, etc Dostoevsky minutely examines each and more through the characters that swirl around Raskolnikov in his 19th Century Petersburg.Go on, immerse yourself in the depravity and inertia that is the mind of Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    I responded more strongly to this book than to any other in recent memory. For a couple hundred pages, I clenched my fists, shut the book after reading only a couple of pages, etc. Somehow I pictured one of the victims as my late Polish grandmother. Though I had read reviews where people thought there was not enough crime and too much punishment, I didn't find enough "punishment" for the criminal during those fist-clenching pages. I have always wanted to read this book, though, and am glad I fought my way through it. I am now reading an Aug. 3 and Aug. 10/17, 2009 two-part New Yorker article, loosely related to the final location of the book, not to give anything away as long as you don't look up your New Yorkers.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    If I had to make a list of books that got under my skin, this would be number one, way above anything else. Do I want to write this..the idea of murder and that you may get carried away with that idea and actually do it is one that really got to me. The interrogation scenes often play out in different variations in my dreams. Unforgettable.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    This book is the reason I love Dostoevsky. He puts his truth in the most unlikely characters and finds his salvation in the most unlikely places.When I lived in St. Petersburg, I had to do the Crime and Punishment walk, the highlight of which is finding Rodion's garret room. There's graffiti on the wall outside "his" door from all his fans and supporters. It's the greatest.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    This is a beautiful book that looks into the state of the human condition and examines a typically russian character and his moral shortcomings. I have always enjoyed the russian authors worldview and find they show beauty in the difficult aspects of life and survival against a backdrop of harsh environment and endemic poverty. It is the character development that is particularly fascinating and the reader finds themselves in a state of empathy with a morally dubious protagonist. If you enjoy pondering the grey areas of life and the thorny end of society and morality, this book covers it extremely well
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5
    I have already stated in a previous review that I love Dostoevsky, so keep that in mind. This novel, although though provoking and philosophically sound, is at times in desperate need of an editor.It seems like the more verbose version of Poe's Telltale Heart.
  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    Dostoyevsky enters the mind of a murderer who feels no remorse but yet cannot bear to keep his act a secret. Rodya commits a senseless crime, which could have been the perfect one but for his arrogance. This story is an excellent description of the criminal mind: the sense of entitlement, the narcisissm, the weird mix of ruthlessness and charity. This author, my all-time favorite, is the master of the psychological novel.
  • Calificación: 3 de 5 estrellas
    3/5

    Six out of ten.

    Raskolnikov, a destitute and desperate former student, commits a random murder without remorse or regret, imagining himself to be a great man far above moral law. But as he embarks on a dangerous cat-and-mouse game with a suspicious police investigator, his own conscience begins to torment him and he seeks sympathy and redemption from Sonya, a downtrodden prostitute.

  • Calificación: 5 de 5 estrellas
    5/5
    What I thought: When my friend recommended this book I thought about it briefly, but was intimidated by reading a long, Russian classic that I was utterly unfamiliar with. And indeed, the length of this novel (my library copy came in at 629 pages) is intimidating. So when I decided to read it this year, I joined another group read and was a little nervous, expecting some long, dense passages like those I had come up against in The Brothers Karamazov.What I found: This is an incredibly readable, compelling story of a man, Rodion Romanovitch Raskolnikov, who considers committing a terrible deed that has been haunting his dreams for some time. "Rodya" is a very flawed yet sympathetic character, and the reader is drawn into his life as well as meeting many other memorable characters along the way. There are philosophical passages, yes, but they're thoughtful without being too dense, and Dostoevsky knows how to write fast-paced passages when the situation calls for it. A few times I was practically holding my breath reading as fast as I could to find out what happens next, other times I was slowing myself down to think about what he was saying and whether I agreed that a certain class of people was above the law and thus above guilt. All the while, I had the sense that the author knew exactly what he was doing in crafting the story and looked forward to seeing how he brought it all together. If I had to briefly summarize Crime and Punishment, I would say that it is a psychological investigation of motives, guilt, and choices that humans make. All in all, I'm very glad that I listened to my friend instead of my misgivings.
  • Calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas
    4/5
    I hate to give such as well known classic a low star rating. Maybe it's because I read the Pevear & Volokhonsky translation, or listened to it in audio. Or maybe Dostoevsky intentionally set out to make the reader feel the mental sickness/madness of the main character, like an unpleasant fever-dream. The first two chapters were great and promising, but the remaining melodramatic and plodding (a trait shared by some other 1850s and 60s classic novels). The best aspects are Dostoevsky's insights on human nature, but to get those ideas requires ascribing motives, thoughts and ideas to his characters that do not feel authentic; the characters are like projections of Dostoevsky himself thus lacking a believable psychology. I'm glad to have read it because it is so famous, but life is short so I look to the classics for a sure thing and this did not deliver. I read The House of the Dead which was great, so may give Dostoevsky another try later.

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Crimen y castigo - Fiódor Dostoievski

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