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White Nights by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|title=His Name Was Wren
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|author=Rob Winters
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REVIEW SUBMISSION
|reviewer=Lesley Mason
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|genre=Confident Readers
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{{infobox1
|summary=Famous Five meets the X-files via Scooby Doo...a page turning fantasy mystery story aimed at young readers, but if you're child-like enough to enjoy Dr Who you might like it too.
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|title=White Nights
|rating=4
+
|sort=White Nights
 +
|author=Fyodor Dostoyevsky
 +
|reviewer=Heather Magee
 +
|genre=Anthologies, Literary Fiction
 +
|summary=This collection of three short stories by Dostoyevsky was a delight. The psychological depth of the characters, the ‘skaz’ narrative style and the wonderful moments of humour all make this collection an immensely entertaining read.  
 +
 
 +
|rating=5
 
|buy=Yes
 
|buy=Yes
 
|borrow=Yes
 
|borrow=Yes
|pages=330
+
|pages=240
|publisher=Independently Published
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|publisher=Penguin Classics
|date=October 2020
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|date=February 2023
|isbn=B08KGVNVNB
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|isbn=978-0241619780
|cover=B08KGVNVNB
+
|website=https://www.fyodordostoevsky.com/
|aznuk=B08KGVNVNB
+
 
|aznus=B08KGVNVNB
+
|video=checked
 +
|cover=0241619785
 +
|aznuk=0241619785
 +
|aznus=0241619785
 
}}
 
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In September 1944 something came down in Oban Woods, near the village of Hurstwick. It came down hard, taking the spire of the village church with it, destroying a stone shack, and leaving a wide trail through the wood, but no trace of what it actually was. German secret weapon was the local gossip, but there should have been an explosion and a crater, and there were neither of those things.
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As always in Dostoyevsky, the character work is sublime. One is never left wondering what a character is thinking or feeling because Dostoyevsky lays bare their innermost dispositions and temperaments with remarkable clarity.
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The first story, ‘A Nasty Business’ follows Ivan Ilyich Pravinsky, a young man recently appointed as a general. With his newfound status, Ivan fancies himself a progressive, priding himself on his humane values—especially in contrast to his colleagues, whom he dismisses as "retrogrades”.
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One evening, he literally (and drunkenly) stumbles upon a subordinate’s wedding, and decides to enter, boasting his indifference towards class divisions. What unfolds is a hilariously cringe-worthy series of events in which Ivan Ilyich’s supposed humility completely unravels. His drunken antics quickly make him the unwelcome centre of attention. He ruins the wedding, ends up sleeping in the bridal bed, and vomits throughout the night—his noble intentions amounting to nothing but chaos and embarrassment. The brilliance of this story lies in Dostoyevsky's ability to craft situations that leave the reader wincing at Ivan Ilyich’s utter lack of self-awareness. Despite his self-image as a man of the people, his behaviour disrupts the natural social order, revealing the farcical limits of his ‘progressive’ ideals.
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‘The Meek One’, the second story, is longer and written in a more fragmented prose, mirroring the scattered mental state of its narrator, a middle-aged pawnbroker. He opens the story in a state of shock, having just discovered that his young wife has committed suicide minutes before he arrived home. He recounts the events of their troubled relationship, marked by his misguided attempt to ‘save’ her from her dismal family situation by proposing to her.  
  
The war office determined that there was a rocket fired that night, shot high into the sky, just to see how high it might go. It came down in pieces, but those pieces were spread over a wide area: an internationally wide area. It had come apart violently, a very long way up. It would appear to have hit something but "what is there to hit sixty miles up"?
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This so-called noble intention, however, only serves to underscore his own emotional ineptitude. In his efforts to make her understand what kind of man he is, he chooses to remain silent in her company, a silence she mirrors, and which breeds mistrust and ill-feeling between them.The Russian skaz narrative style, which mimics the spoken word, works beautifully here to portray the narrator as a bumbling fool, as if he were a schoolchild recounting an incident to an exasperated teacher.
  
George Moss is an evacuee from London, and as in all the best children's adventure stories he has a dog. The dog isn't his…he's just sort of adopted it, as the family have sort of adopted him. On the night of the Hurstwick incident as it becomes known, George and Chip (the dog) set out to investigate alongside the adults. It is in trying not to get caught doing so that they first come across the stranger. A stranger they will come to know as Wren.
 
  
In July 2018 14-year-old Max Cannon and his mother leave London for good and move to a cottage in Hurstwick. He's not keen on the idea. It's not that he will miss his friends. He doesn't really have any friends, but he will miss being able to watch people from the balcony of their high-rise flat. Watching is something that Max does. Not having friends is something he is about to stop doing…first Ellie and then Isaac quickly work their way into his world. Ellie is the worldly-wise older girl (by all of one year) and Isaac is a self-confessed geek (and proud of it). They don't have a dog – though they might find themselves inventing one at some stage in the adventure.
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This story of a neglected wife and her clueless husband dispels into a very nihilistic worldview held by our narrator, who has displayed nothing but cowardice and insecurity throughout the tale. To put it lightly, the ending is anything but satisfactory.
  
Ah yes. Of course there is to be an adventure. Three school-children, each a bit strange in their own way, the beginning of the summer holidays, and they live in the kind of place where even in the 21st century children are pretty much left to their own devices during the day, and riding bicycles is still a thing. Of course mobile phones and drone cameras are also a thing. They also live in a place where 74 years ago something came down in the woods and at least one of the locals does not believe the official version of events about that night.
 
  
What follows can be described as The Famous Five meet the X-files by way of Scooby Doo – a number of the villagers are decidedly not quite 'right'. A series of unlikely events, including boxes hidden under floorboards, diverted by-pass routes and a negligent night-watchman, lead our modern trio into investigating what really happened in 1944. Expect aliens and strange hunters.
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The titular story, ‘White Nights’, is my favourite. The unnamed narrator, a dreamy and lonely young man, stumbles upon Nastenka one wintry night. She appears vulnerable, crying in the street, and he feels compelled to speak to her. Even the fact that he learns her name, while she never asks for his, speaks volumes about the dynamics between them. He is helplessly drawn to her; she simply hosts his kindness.  
  
The book is marketed with a target audience of 12+ but I think would appeal to younger confident readers. The plot twists occur at suitable intervals and it is a mixture of plausibility and silliness. Reading as a non-parent adult, I confess to having enjoyed it. From the adult perspective a lot of what is to follow can be guessed at in general terms, but the precise unfolding kept me engaged enough to keep turning the pages and wanting to know how it would all play out. I will admit that I missed some of the early clues. If you can suspend disbelief enough to enjoy Doctor Who, then I think you'll get this one.
 
  
The humour is lightly played, and the violence kept real-enough but not graphic or gruesome.  
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The two decide to get to know one another over the course of several nights, sharing the stories of their lives. Our narrator speaks first, lamenting the isolation that has defined his existence: "And in vain does the dreamer rake through his old dreams, as if they were ashes, searching in these ashes for at least some little spark, in order to fan it into flames…” His poetic outpourings could easily come off as self-pitying, but Dostoyevsky’s beautiful imagery and turns of phrase make them captivating. The narrator is a typical eccentric, romantic type—driven by a "morbidly excited imagination." His aloof sincerity charms Nastenka, who seems, at best, entertained by his flights of fancy.
  
The one problem I do have with the book is that it does continue beyond what I felt was its natural end-point. The final chapter does feel like a rush to wrap it all up. I'd have preferred to see the events of that chapter more fully developed in the same style as the rest of the book, or alternatively for it to have stopped at the end of the previous chapter, with only a line or two to hint at what happens next…opening the way to Episode 2.
 
  
All in all though it's a good read and I'm sure any budding sci-fi readers who are still more into the fiction than the science will really enjoy it.  
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Nastenka, however, is just as lonely as our narrator. She reveals that for the past year she has been bound to her blind grandmother’s clothes as punishment for mischief. She had little social life, except for a young lodger with whom she developed a slow-burning romance. The day she meets our hero is the day she has been waiting for—the day of her lover’s return from Moscow. Our narrator, besotted with Nastenka, agrees to help her reunite with her lost love, despite his growing feelings for her.
  
If they like this, then the Bookbag thinks they'll also love [[The Declaration by Gemma Malley]]
 
  
{{amazontext|amazon=B08KGVNVNB}}
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Over the course of four nights, their friendship deepens, blossoming into love. There’s a beautiful symmetry in Dostoyevsky’s portrayal of Nastenka’s world: her blind grandmother, deaf maid, and mute, lame previous lodger—all incapable of fully engaging with life. In contrast, our hero, so acutely attuned to the world through his sensitivity and emotion, seems like an irresistible force of change in her life.
  
{{amazonUStext|amazon=B08KGVNVNB}}
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Eventually, our hero can bear it no longer: he confesses his love and after some consideration, Nastenka reciprocates, both lonely souls now bound to each other. Their brief moment of mutual affection is portrayed as a delicate dance, their emotions rippling between them through subtle gestures—a squeeze of the hand, a tear welling up, a sharp intake of breath. But this dance is interrupted by the return of Nastenka’s former lover. She ultimately chooses the life she had dreamed of before meeting our hero, leaving him to retreat once again into his solitary existence.
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Nastenka remains an ambiguous figure. Is she a selfish soul, carelessly toying with our narrator's feelings? Or is she, like him, simply lonely and desperate, swept up by the kindness of a stranger? Her letter to the narrator after she becomes engaged, inviting him to her wedding, is thoughtless and almost cruel. It’s hard not to side with our hapless hero as he is left with nothing but his shattered dreams.
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{{amazontext|amazon=0241619785}}
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{{amazontextAud|amazon=0241619785}}
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{{amazonUStext|amazon=0241619785}}
  
 
{{commenthead}}
 
{{commenthead}}
  
[[Category:Teens]]
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{{Frontpage
[[Category:Science Fiction]]
+
|author=Fyodor Dostoyevsky
 +
|title=White Nights
 +
|rating=5
 +
 
 +
|genre=Anthologies, Literary Fiction
 +
|summary=As always in Dostoyevsky, the character work is sublime. One is never left wondering what a character is thinking or feeling because Dostoyevsky lays bare their innermost dispositions and temperaments with remarkable clarity.
 +
|isbn=0241619785
 +
}}

Latest revision as of 14:37, 29 September 2024

White Nights by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

REVIEW SUBMISSION



White Nights by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

File:0241619785.jpg
Buy Sandbox at Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

Category: Anthologies, Literary Fiction
Rating: 5/5
Reviewer: Heather Magee
Reviewed by Heather Magee
Summary: This collection of three short stories by Dostoyevsky was a delight. The psychological depth of the characters, the ‘skaz’ narrative style and the wonderful moments of humour all make this collection an immensely entertaining read.
Buy? Yes Borrow? Yes
Pages: 240 Date: February 2023
Publisher: Penguin Classics
External links: Author's website
ISBN: 978-0241619780

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As always in Dostoyevsky, the character work is sublime. One is never left wondering what a character is thinking or feeling because Dostoyevsky lays bare their innermost dispositions and temperaments with remarkable clarity.

The first story, ‘A Nasty Business’ follows Ivan Ilyich Pravinsky, a young man recently appointed as a general. With his newfound status, Ivan fancies himself a progressive, priding himself on his humane values—especially in contrast to his colleagues, whom he dismisses as "retrogrades”.

One evening, he literally (and drunkenly) stumbles upon a subordinate’s wedding, and decides to enter, boasting his indifference towards class divisions. What unfolds is a hilariously cringe-worthy series of events in which Ivan Ilyich’s supposed humility completely unravels. His drunken antics quickly make him the unwelcome centre of attention. He ruins the wedding, ends up sleeping in the bridal bed, and vomits throughout the night—his noble intentions amounting to nothing but chaos and embarrassment. The brilliance of this story lies in Dostoyevsky's ability to craft situations that leave the reader wincing at Ivan Ilyich’s utter lack of self-awareness. Despite his self-image as a man of the people, his behaviour disrupts the natural social order, revealing the farcical limits of his ‘progressive’ ideals.

‘The Meek One’, the second story, is longer and written in a more fragmented prose, mirroring the scattered mental state of its narrator, a middle-aged pawnbroker. He opens the story in a state of shock, having just discovered that his young wife has committed suicide minutes before he arrived home. He recounts the events of their troubled relationship, marked by his misguided attempt to ‘save’ her from her dismal family situation by proposing to her.

This so-called noble intention, however, only serves to underscore his own emotional ineptitude. In his efforts to make her understand what kind of man he is, he chooses to remain silent in her company, a silence she mirrors, and which breeds mistrust and ill-feeling between them.The Russian skaz narrative style, which mimics the spoken word, works beautifully here to portray the narrator as a bumbling fool, as if he were a schoolchild recounting an incident to an exasperated teacher.


This story of a neglected wife and her clueless husband dispels into a very nihilistic worldview held by our narrator, who has displayed nothing but cowardice and insecurity throughout the tale. To put it lightly, the ending is anything but satisfactory.


The titular story, ‘White Nights’, is my favourite. The unnamed narrator, a dreamy and lonely young man, stumbles upon Nastenka one wintry night. She appears vulnerable, crying in the street, and he feels compelled to speak to her. Even the fact that he learns her name, while she never asks for his, speaks volumes about the dynamics between them. He is helplessly drawn to her; she simply hosts his kindness.


The two decide to get to know one another over the course of several nights, sharing the stories of their lives. Our narrator speaks first, lamenting the isolation that has defined his existence: "And in vain does the dreamer rake through his old dreams, as if they were ashes, searching in these ashes for at least some little spark, in order to fan it into flames…” His poetic outpourings could easily come off as self-pitying, but Dostoyevsky’s beautiful imagery and turns of phrase make them captivating. The narrator is a typical eccentric, romantic type—driven by a "morbidly excited imagination." His aloof sincerity charms Nastenka, who seems, at best, entertained by his flights of fancy.


Nastenka, however, is just as lonely as our narrator. She reveals that for the past year she has been bound to her blind grandmother’s clothes as punishment for mischief. She had little social life, except for a young lodger with whom she developed a slow-burning romance. The day she meets our hero is the day she has been waiting for—the day of her lover’s return from Moscow. Our narrator, besotted with Nastenka, agrees to help her reunite with her lost love, despite his growing feelings for her.


Over the course of four nights, their friendship deepens, blossoming into love. There’s a beautiful symmetry in Dostoyevsky’s portrayal of Nastenka’s world: her blind grandmother, deaf maid, and mute, lame previous lodger—all incapable of fully engaging with life. In contrast, our hero, so acutely attuned to the world through his sensitivity and emotion, seems like an irresistible force of change in her life.


Eventually, our hero can bear it no longer: he confesses his love and after some consideration, Nastenka reciprocates, both lonely souls now bound to each other. Their brief moment of mutual affection is portrayed as a delicate dance, their emotions rippling between them through subtle gestures—a squeeze of the hand, a tear welling up, a sharp intake of breath. But this dance is interrupted by the return of Nastenka’s former lover. She ultimately chooses the life she had dreamed of before meeting our hero, leaving him to retreat once again into his solitary existence.


Nastenka remains an ambiguous figure. Is she a selfish soul, carelessly toying with our narrator's feelings? Or is she, like him, simply lonely and desperate, swept up by the kindness of a stranger? Her letter to the narrator after she becomes engaged, inviting him to her wedding, is thoughtless and almost cruel. It’s hard not to side with our hapless hero as he is left with nothing but his shattered dreams.

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File:0241619785.jpg

Review of

White Nights by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

5star.jpg Anthologies, Literary Fiction

As always in Dostoyevsky, the character work is sublime. One is never left wondering what a character is thinking or feeling because Dostoyevsky lays bare their innermost dispositions and temperaments with remarkable clarity. Full Review