The Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Brothers Karamazov, Fyodor Dostoevsky
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The Brothers Karamazov

Author: Fyodor Dostoevsky

Narrator: Alex Squire, The Light

Unabridged: 39 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/22/2026

Categories: Fiction


Synopsis

This monumental philosophical and psychological novel by Fyodor Dostoevsky follows the lives of three very different brothers bound together by blood, resentment, faith, doubt, and the dark shadow of their shared father. Each brother represents a conflicting vision of human nature—reason and rebellion, spiritual devotion, and reckless passion—while all are drawn into a moral storm that will test the limits of love, loyalty, and conscience.
As betrayal, desire, greed, and long-buried hatred rise to the surface, a violent crime shatters the family and forces every character to confront the truth of their own soul. Guilt spreads far beyond the one who commits the act, entangling the innocent with the corrupt and exposing how responsibility, choice, and suffering are never confined to a single person. Faith collides with atheism, free will wrestles with fate, and justice itself becomes uncertain in a world where truth is buried beneath fear and self-deception.
Through spiritual struggle, courtroom drama, confession, and inner torment, Fyodor Dostoevsky explores God, evil, redemption, love, and the terrifying freedom of human choice. The novel confronts the deepest questions of existence—why people suffer, whether morality can exist without faith, and whether forgiveness is possible after unimaginable wrongdoing. It is a vast and unforgettable meditation on the human soul at war with itself.

About Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881), born in Moscow, lived much of his childhood distanced from his frail mother and officious father. During these formative years, he formed a close bond with his elder brother Mikhail. When they were teenagers, however, Fyodor and Mikhail were enrolled in separate boarding schools, Fyodor matriculating at an engineering school in St. Petersburg. Even as he was studying the trade of government, Dostoevsky was honing his skills as a writer, inking drafts of what would become his first novel-Poor Folk. In 1846, it was published to warm critical response. Something of a literary figure at the age of twenty-five, Dostoevsky began attending the discussion group that would result in his imprisonment. His sentence was commuted to four years in prison and four years of army service. His prison experiences, as well as his life after prison among the urban poor of Russia, provided a vivid backdrop for much of his later work. Released from his imprisonment and service by 1858, he began a fourteen-year period of furious writing, in which he published many significant texts, including The House of the Dead, Notes from the Underground, Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, and Devils. During this period, Dostoevsky's life was in upheaval, as he lost both his first wife and his brother. On February 15, 1867, he married his stenographer Anna Grigorevna Snitkina, who managed his affairs until his death. Two months before he died, Dostoevsky completed the epilogue to The Brothers Karamazov, which was published in serial form in the Russian Messenger.


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