Ok, got a job. I start the 28th of this month, which leads me to I NEED A PLACE TO LIVE! I don’t think commuting from C’ville to DC is a viable option, it takes, at least, two hours both ways. Now the problem is finding a nice place takes time. I don’t have time. Everywhere I have called so far was full, or only had two or three bedroom units. Anyone know where there is a nice one bedroom for rent in DuPont or Adams Morgan?
reviews section
I made some changes to the site. I have upgraded the “books” section to the “reviews” section. I entered some of the old books into the new interface which is based on Movable Type so that you can all comment on my reviews. I will add the rest of the old books as soon as possible and *hopefully* add many more books—and cd’s and movies. Enjoy!
The Brothers Karamazov
- Title
- The Brothers Karamazov
- Author
- Fyodor Doestoevsky
- Translator
- Richard Pevear
- Larissa Volokhonsk

I have heard a lot of people refer to The Brothers Karamazov [worldcat.org] as Dostoevsky’s crowning work his magnum opus. And while it is a great book, I liked Crime and Punishment [confusion.cc] more.
The Brothers Karamazov is a massive book. It’s filled with Dostoevsky insight into human nature, and family and religion and much more. Dostoevsky uses the novel to attack. He attacks everything from utilitarianism to Christianity and, especially, all things “Russian” or at least those “Russian” things that Dostoevsky takes issue with.
Ivan, Dmitri and Alyosha, the titular brothers Karamazov are some of the most complex characters I’ve ever encountered. The three of them form a kind of id, ego and super ego of Dostoevsky’s Russian any man.
The Brothers Karamazov is a must read. As far as Dostoevsky’s canon, I would says it’s second only to Crime and Punishment and one of the best books ever written. It helps cement Dostoevsky’s place as one of the best novelist of all time. However, the sheer expansiveness of the Brothers K works against it for me. It’s a slog. I think the focus and length of Crime and Punishment works better, and is Dostoevsky’s best novel.
Crime and Punishment

Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment [worldcat.org] and Sartre’s The Age of Reason [confusion.cc] are my favorite novels after The Lord of the Rings (as a whole, all three volumes) . The writing is absolutely amazing, even in translation it flows effortlessly along carrying the reader slowly at first then quicker, eventually building to a fever pitch. Dostoevsky weaves a timeless tale of guilt in Crime and Punishment because he focuses not on the crime but on the criminal’s state of mind. Raskolnikov may be an anti-hero, but the reader is drawn to him and feels his suffering. Dostoevsky’s insight into the mind of Raskolnikov keeps the reader turning the page, wanting to know what he will do and think next. Crime is an amazing insight into the strange in irrational behavior of man.
A Hundred Years of Solitude
This book won Marquez the Nobel Prize for Literature. It’s that good. It follows the rise and fall of the Buendia family and the village, Macondo, which they founded. Along the way there is incest, gypsies, insomnia, civil war and true love. Marquez magical realism shines through and somewhere along the way the reader forgets the distinction between the magical and the real. Characters pass in and out the the narative as the world around passed in and out of Mocondo. The main conflict of the book, civil war, seams to be Marquez’s comentary on the state of his homeland, Columbia.

