Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky was born in Moscow in 1821, the
second of a physician's seven children. His mother died in 1837 and
his father was murdered a little over two years later. When he left
his private boarding school in Moscow he studied from 1838 to 1843
at the Military Engineering College in St Petersburg, graduating
with officer's rank. His first story to be published, 'Poor Folk'
(1846), was a great success.
In 1849 he was arrested and sentenced to death for participating in
the 'Petrashevsky circle'; he was reprieved at the last moment but
sentenced to penal servitude, and until 1854 he lived in a convict
prison at Omsk, Siberia. In the decade following his return from
exile he wrote The Village of Stepanchikovo (1859) and The House of
the Dead (1860). Whereas the latter draws heavily on his
experiences in prison, the former inhabits a completely different
world, shot through with comedy and satire.
In 1861 he began the review Vremya (Time) with his brother; in 1862
and 1863 he went abroad, where he strengthened his anti-European
outlook, met Mlle Suslova, who was the model for many of his
heroines, and gave way to his passion for gambling. In the
following years he fell deeply in debt, but in 1867 he married Anna
Grigoryevna Snitkina (his second wife), who helped to rescue him
from his financial morass. They lived abroad for four years, then
in 1873 he was invited to edit Grazhdanin (The Citizen), to which
he contributed his Diary of a Writer. From 1876 the latter was
issued separately and had a large circulation. In 1880 he delivered
his famous address at the unveiling of Pushkin's memorial in
Moscow; he died six months later in 1881. Most of his important
works were written after 1864- Notes from Underground (1864), Crime
and Punishment (1865-6), The Gambler (1866), The Idiot (1869), The
Devils (1871) and The Brothers Karamazov (1880).
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