Kevin Birmingham received his Ph.D. in English from Harvard, where he was a Lecturer in English and in History & Literature as well as an instructor in the university's Writing Program. He is the author of the New York Times bestselling The Most Dangerous Book. It received the PEN New England Award for Nonfiction in 2015 and the Truman Capote Award for Literary Criticism in 2016.
I never imagined anyone could make Dostoevsky
richer--deeper--knottier--than he already was. But by revealing the
secret background behind Crime and Punishment, Kevin Birmingham
reveals a depth of thought and feeling that makes this most
shocking of novels even more shocking yet. After all, it's easy
enough to say what makes a murderer bad. It's far harder to say
what makes him good.
*Benjamin Moser*
Birmingham's impressive research combined with a flair for
characterising the teeming intellectual debates of the day give
absorbing insights into the origins of one of the world's great
novels.
*Sue Prideaux*
A page turner about turning pages, The Sinner and the Saint:
Dostoevsky and the Gentleman Murderer Who Inspired A Masterpiece
not only brings us back into the fevered panic of Raskolnikov as he
murders an old woman, his motives a mystery even to his own
sputtering mind, but also to real-life characters, most vividly a
Parisian dandy (we might now call him 'gay'), whose nihilism and
thrill killings set Dostoevsky's imagination ticking. Compulsively
readable, tautly drawn, and richly researched, here is the
brilliant study Dostoevsky and his staggering Crime and
Punishment-filled, we now find, with intimations of him-so
deserves
*Brad Gooch, New York Times Bestselling author of Flannery: A Life
of Flannery O’Connor*
Dostoevsky didn't have any choice about misery-the Siberian exile
and the epilepsy, the despair and debts and the deaths of those he
loved. All that just fell upon him, and none of us would want to be
him, not even for the sake of those books. But wanting to know what
it was like to be him-well, that's different, and I can't imagine a
better guide than Kevin Birmingham. Dostoevsky was both sinner and
saint, and this wonderfully pungent book presents his extraordinary
life in the most vivid detail imaginable. Birmingham puts you in
the room when Raskolnikov brings down the axe; and he puts you
there too when the novelist discovers the face of redemptive
love.
*Michael Gorra, author of The Saddest Words: William Faulkner’s
Civil War*
With The Sinner and the Saint, Kevin Birmingham has scored a hat
trick, delivering three biographies in one book-expertly
chronicling the lives of the man who wrote Crime and Punishment and
the murderer who inspired the tale, and the fascinating evolution
of the novel itself. Birmingham's ingenious braided narrative
offers an inspired new reading to those who already know and love
Dostoevsky's masterpiece, and serves as an indispensable guide for
first time readers.
*Megan Marshall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Margaret Fuller:
A New American Life and Elizabeth Bishop: A Miracle for
Breakfast*
The Sinner and the Saint is a gripping murder mystery - a dazzling
literary "howdunnit" that meticulously reconstructs the political
ferment that inspired Dostoevsky's most famous novel. At the heart
of it all is Raskolnikov's real-life double, a charming gentleman
murderer whose trial set Parisian society ablaze.
*Alex Christofi, author of Dostoevsky in Love*
An absorbing, thickly textured biography of Crime and Punishment
that develops through fragments and shards... Kevin Birmingham has
written a bold and rewarding book that will allow readers, whatever
their own predispositions, to return to Dostoevsky's first
masterpiece with a renewed and more capacious perspective.
*Literary Review*
[an] inspired account of the genesis-philosophical and
neurological-of Crime and Punishment...Birmingham is superb, in The
Sinner and the Saint, on the intellectual environment, the
vibrational stew
*The Atlantic*
[an] excellent biographical study... In pungent, well-researched
pages, Birmingham reveals the "secret" background behind
Dostoevsky's great murder novel ... a model of luminous exposition
and literary detection, The Sinner and the Saint can be recommended
to anyone interested in the dark twisted genius of "Dusty", as
Nabokov (with a touch of mockery) nicknamed the ill-fated Russian
maestro.
*The Observer*
Birmingham has alchemized scholarship into a magisterially
immersive, novelistic account of the author's life... Birmingham's
book sometimes improves on even fiction like J. M. Coetzee's
Dostoyevsky novel... The Sinner and the Saint is a magnificent and
fitting tribute.
*The New York Times*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |