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The Idiot
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Narrado por:
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AI Voice Charles Owen
Este título utiliza una narración voz virtual
Voz virtual es una narración para audiolibros generada por ordenador.
Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Idiot, published in 1869, poses this devastating question through one of literature's most extraordinary characters: Prince Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin, a man so pure of heart that society can only regard him as a fool.
Returning to Russia after years of treatment for epilepsy in Switzerland, Myshkin enters St. Petersburg society with the radical notion that human beings can be redeemed through love and compassion. His Christ-like innocence immediately draws him into the lives of two remarkable women: Nastasya Filippovna, a beauty whose soul has been shattered by abuse and betrayal, and Aglaya Epanchin, a spirited young woman torn between convention and her own fierce independence. What follows is a tragedy of such scope and intensity that it ranks among Dostoevsky's greatest achievements.
The Idiot is far more than a character study—it is Dostoevsky's bold attempt to imagine what would happen if a truly good person walked among us. Myshkin's very existence becomes a mirror that reflects the moral compromises, petty jealousies, and desperate hungers that drive those around him. His inability to navigate the treacherous currents of social ambition and sexual desire makes him simultaneously the most innocent and most dangerous person in every room he enters.
For readers willing to confront these difficult questions, The Idiot offers one of literature's most rewarding and heartbreaking experiences—a masterpiece that continues to challenge our assumptions about virtue, suffering, and what it truly means to be human.
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