Tufts & Co. Pocket Essentials Four unforgettable tales of conscience, despair, and the fragile hope of redemption— from one of the most visionary minds in world literature In this powerful collection, Fyodor Dostoyevsky distills his towering philosophical themes into short fiction that is no less profound than his novels. These four stories explore the boundaries between sanity and madness, morality and delusion, isolation and spiritual awakening. The Dream of a Ridiculous Man is a metaphysical fable of despair, suicide, and cosmic revelation, in which a man dreams his way into a moral utopia— and awakens transformed. - An Honest Thief tells a heartbreaking tale of guilt, addiction, and quiet dignity among the poor. - The Peasant Marey is a lyrical, autobiographical reminiscence of childhood innocence and human compassion that stands in poignant contrast to the brutality of adult life. - Bobok is a grotesque and darkly comic monologue of the dead, heard by a drunken narrator at a cemetery— a sardonic meditation on decay, both physical and moral. Together, these stories showcase Dostoyevsky's unparalleled ability to delve into the psychology of the human soul— its contradictions, delusions, and sacred potential. Why This Edition? Translated by Constance Garnett, the first and most enduring English translator of Dostoyevsky - Ideal for both longtime readers and those new to Dostoyevsky’s work What Scholars Say “No other writer has been so adept at uncovering the most hidden folds of the soul.” — Sigmund Freud , Dostoyevsky and Parricide “Dostoyevsky is the only psychologist, incidentally, from whom I have anything to learn.” — Friedrich Nietzsche , Twilight of the Idols “In these short stories, we find Dostoyevsky’s vision in its purest form— stripped down, intense, and terrifyingly human.” — Joseph Frank , Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time Perfect For Readers Who Enjoy Introspective fiction with existential and philosophical depth - Russian literature and 19th-century moral drama - Writers like Franz Kafka, Albert Camus, and Flannery O’Connor