Demons(sometimes also called The Possessed or The Devils) is a novel by Fyodor Dostoevsky, first published
in the journal The Russian Messenger in 1871–72. It is considered one of the four masterworks
written by Dostoevsky after his return from Siberian exile, along with Crime and Punishment (1866),
The Idiot (1869), and The Brothers Karamazov (1880).
Demons is an allegory of the potentially catastrophic consequences of the political and moral
nihilism that were becoming prevalent in Russia in the 1860s. A fictional town descends into
chaos as it becomes the focal point of an attempted revolution, orchestrated by master conspirator
Pyotr Verkhovensky. The mysterious aristocratic figure of Nikolai Stavrogin—Verkhovensky's
counterpart in the moral sphere—dominates the book, exercising an extraordinary influence over the
hearts and minds of almost all the other characters. The idealistic, Western-influenced
intellectuals of the 1840s, epitomized in the character of Stepan Verkhovensky (who is both Pyotr
Verkhovensky's father and Nikolai Stavrogin's childhood teacher), are presented as the unconscious
progenitors and helpless accomplices of the "demonic" forces that take possession of the town.