The
Brothers Karamazov
By
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Am I My Brother’s Keeper?
Review by Lorilyn Roberts
The Brothers Karamazov opened my eyes to the depths of
fine writing and what is necessary to improve mine. I felt humbled and
chastised by The Brothers Karamazov. The meanings and symbolism were much deeper
than my own superficiality; i.e., I didn’t like the ending, there wasn’t the
redemption I was looking for, Dmitri was found guilty; thus, the court system
failed. I wanted to know what was going to happen to him. I felt like Dostovsky
didn’t know what to do, so he just left it open for the reader to conjecture, a
cop-out. I didn’t agree with the theme of the book, that we are responsible for
other’s people’s sins in the sense that he was so emphatic. I felt like there
were a lot of extraneous people in the story that served no real purpose, or
why did the little boy die? What did
that add to the story? I liked The Brothers Karamazov, it’s just I
wanted it to be nice and tidy. It wasn’t.
The most
difficult place to affect change is in someone's core beliefs. What depth of
understanding can we impart to a reader beyond his current level? If we can
convict a reader to change one aspect of his thinking, we can influence a whole
generation. The Brothers Karamazov more
than any other book broke down my idealistic view of what is good writing.
Once we acknowledge there is a higher standard than what we are familiar with, we must be willing to risk failure to attain it. Do we not learn more from our failures than from our accomplishments?
Writing superficially is safe. It's not that we don't have an arc to the story, a protagonist and a villain, complications and a denouement; it's just that the superficiality will not touch deeply the heart of the reader. If we write with emotion and risk failure, though no one may acknowledge or know the risk except the writer, we will have raised the art of our writing to a new level.
Once we acknowledge there is a higher standard than what we are familiar with, we must be willing to risk failure to attain it. Do we not learn more from our failures than from our accomplishments?
Writing superficially is safe. It's not that we don't have an arc to the story, a protagonist and a villain, complications and a denouement; it's just that the superficiality will not touch deeply the heart of the reader. If we write with emotion and risk failure, though no one may acknowledge or know the risk except the writer, we will have raised the art of our writing to a new level.
Initially,
due to my own flawed perception and pride, I felt like Alyosha was weak and
Zosima was a dreamer. But they were real people with untarnished characters.
They were their brother’s keeper. Pride has a way of distorting our vision of
who we are. The Brothers Karamazov confronted
my flawed thinking about antagonists, forcing
me to address my own sin in one
significant area: Maybe I am my brother’s keeper.
But I
admitted in my black heart, I don’t want to be my brother’s keeper. That means
I have to love some people that are quite unlovable. If I am unwilling and I call
myself a Christian, I am a fake. Am I willing to be my brother’s keeper? If
I apply my beliefs to only loving those whom I choose to love, that means I am
no different from Ivan or Dmitri.
It
would be rare for a book to change more than one core belief in a person's
thought process. To effectuate any change
is mind boggling. How many people read the Bible and walk away, darkened in
their understanding? If the Greatest Book ever written can't convict every soul
who scours its pages in search of answers, what pride we must have to believe
we can bring about a metamorphosis in anyone. There must be a movement of the
Holy Spirit to effectuate change. Only then can our words be powerful and only if
executed to perfection. The Brothers
Karamazov came as close to bringing me to my knees as any book I have read
outside the Bible.
It is also interesting to note the political undertones in The Brothers Karamazov which predated the communist revolution in Russia by a few decades. .And freedom – Christ set men free. The opposite of that is totalitarianism. Perhaps the fight is greater than we realize. Our thoughts spoken into our books may even reflect prophetically the future as we seek to write from a Christian worldview. That was certainly the case with Fyodor Dostoevsky.
Some consider The Brothers Karamazov the greatest book ever written outside the Bible. Considering its place alongside the rest of the classics I have read, I would agree.
It is also interesting to note the political undertones in The Brothers Karamazov which predated the communist revolution in Russia by a few decades. .And freedom – Christ set men free. The opposite of that is totalitarianism. Perhaps the fight is greater than we realize. Our thoughts spoken into our books may even reflect prophetically the future as we seek to write from a Christian worldview. That was certainly the case with Fyodor Dostoevsky.
Some consider The Brothers Karamazov the greatest book ever written outside the Bible. Considering its place alongside the rest of the classics I have read, I would agree.