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Discussion What yall reading rn ?

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i buy books and dont read them
 
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I’ve read the idiot by dostoevsky im yet to read this
Idk if that’s just autistic but it’s cool to read him chronologically as his perspective change.
 
I heard they changed the ending in the movie
I haven’t read the book so Idr if they made it different lol
 
Idk if that’s just autistic but it’s cool to read him chronologically as his perspective change.
That’s actually a really good suggestion tbh, I’ll buy his other books soon
 
That’s actually a really good suggestion tbh, I’ll buy his other books soon
Here’s a translation of one page of one of his books. It’s basically a quick explanation of his life span and the moments he published each book:

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was born on October 30, 1821, in Moscow. He lost his parents at an early age β€” his mother in 1837, taken by illness; his father in 1839, murdered by serfs on his estate. Having embarked on a military career, he abandoned it in 1844, the year he wrote his first novel, Poor Folk, published in 1846, soon followed by other works (including The Double, The Landlady, and White Nights). A member of the liberal Petrashevsky Circle in Saint Petersburg, he was arrested in 1849, imprisoned, and sentenced to death. He was pardoned at the foot of the execution post and deported to the prison camp in Omsk, Siberia. Permitted to return to Saint Petersburg in 1859, he published in the years that followed β€” during which he also contributed to the journal run by his brother, Vremya (Time), and traveled across Europe β€” many of his works: Memoirs from the House of the Dead in 1862, Notes from Underground in 1864, Crime and Punishment and The Gambler in 1866. Riddled with debt, consumed by his passion for gambling, and weakened by severe epileptic seizures β€” an affliction he had suffered since childhood β€” he went on to publish The Idiot (1868), The Eternal Husband (1870), Demons (1871–1872), A Writer’s Diary (1873–1881), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880). The writer passed away the following year, on January 28, at the age of fifty-nine.
 
Here’s a translation of one page of one of his books. It’s basically a quick explanation of his life span and the moments he published each book:
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was born on October 30, 1821, in Moscow. He lost his parents at an early age β€” his mother in 1837, taken by illness; his father in 1839, murdered by serfs on his estate. Having embarked on a military career, he abandoned it in 1844, the year he wrote his first novel, Poor Folk, published in 1846, soon followed by other works (including The Double, The Landlady, and White Nights). A member of the liberal Petrashevsky Circle in Saint Petersburg, he was arrested in 1849, imprisoned, and sentenced to death. He was pardoned at the foot of the execution post and deported to the prison camp in Omsk, Siberia. Permitted to return to Saint Petersburg in 1859, he published in the years that followed β€” during which he also contributed to the journal run by his brother, Vremya (Time), and traveled across Europe β€” many of his works: Memoirs from the House of the Dead in 1862, Notes from Underground in 1864, Crime and Punishment and The Gambler in 1866. Riddled with debt, consumed by his passion for gambling, and weakened by severe epileptic seizures β€” an affliction he had suffered since childhood β€” he went on to publish The Idiot (1868), The Eternal Husband (1870), Demons (1871–1872), A Writer’s Diary (1873–1881), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880). The writer passed away the following year, on January 28, at the age of fifty-nine.
dnr dnr anddd drn
 
Here’s a translation of one page of one of his books. It’s basically a quick explanation of his life span and the moments he published each book:

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was born on October 30, 1821, in Moscow. He lost his parents at an early age β€” his mother in 1837, taken by illness; his father in 1839, murdered by serfs on his estate. Having embarked on a military career, he abandoned it in 1844, the year he wrote his first novel, Poor Folk, published in 1846, soon followed by other works (including The Double, The Landlady, and White Nights). A member of the liberal Petrashevsky Circle in Saint Petersburg, he was arrested in 1849, imprisoned, and sentenced to death. He was pardoned at the foot of the execution post and deported to the prison camp in Omsk, Siberia. Permitted to return to Saint Petersburg in 1859, he published in the years that followed β€” during which he also contributed to the journal run by his brother, Vremya (Time), and traveled across Europe β€” many of his works: Memoirs from the House of the Dead in 1862, Notes from Underground in 1864, Crime and Punishment and The Gambler in 1866. Riddled with debt, consumed by his passion for gambling, and weakened by severe epileptic seizures β€” an affliction he had suffered since childhood β€” he went on to publish The Idiot (1868), The Eternal Husband (1870), Demons (1871–1872), A Writer’s Diary (1873–1881), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880). The writer passed away the following year, on January 28, at the age of fifty-nine.
NORMIE SLOOOOOP
 
I am calssic person
 
Here’s a translation of one page of one of his books. It’s basically a quick explanation of his life span and the moments he published each book:

Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky was born on October 30, 1821, in Moscow. He lost his parents at an early age β€” his mother in 1837, taken by illness; his father in 1839, murdered by serfs on his estate. Having embarked on a military career, he abandoned it in 1844, the year he wrote his first novel, Poor Folk, published in 1846, soon followed by other works (including The Double, The Landlady, and White Nights). A member of the liberal Petrashevsky Circle in Saint Petersburg, he was arrested in 1849, imprisoned, and sentenced to death. He was pardoned at the foot of the execution post and deported to the prison camp in Omsk, Siberia. Permitted to return to Saint Petersburg in 1859, he published in the years that followed β€” during which he also contributed to the journal run by his brother, Vremya (Time), and traveled across Europe β€” many of his works: Memoirs from the House of the Dead in 1862, Notes from Underground in 1864, Crime and Punishment and The Gambler in 1866. Riddled with debt, consumed by his passion for gambling, and weakened by severe epileptic seizures β€” an affliction he had suffered since childhood β€” he went on to publish The Idiot (1868), The Eternal Husband (1870), Demons (1871–1872), A Writer’s Diary (1873–1881), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880). The writer passed away the following year, on January 28, at the age of fifty-nine.
Holy shit god don’t fw this n***a
 
I read the catcher in the rye, not the scarlet letter tho
the scarlet letter is okay, i think hawthorne uses an unnecessary amount of words sometimes but the novel has a good message. i really have enjoyed catcher thus far, i will probably finish it over the summer but not rn because of finals
 

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