Lianne
Written on Jan 19, 2014
A Curse on Dostoevsky is a very curious novel, sort of straddling between waking and dreaming. The novel is very internal and reminiscent of Dostoevsky’s infamous Crime and Punishment; the main character, Rassoul, from the very first page finds himself walking in Raskolnikov’s (notice that their names are similar) footsteps, undergoing a similar internal debate and torment. The internal struggles that Rassoul undergoes was probably my favourite aspect of the novel. It’s a bleak outlook, to be sure: over the course of the novel Rassoul finds himself falling into an abyss and the things he’s held on to–his fiancee, his family, his learnedness–fades away the further the reader delves into the novel. I wish events of this novel were a little clearer but the overall murkiness of Rassoul’s thoughts adds to the overall atmosphere of the novel.