The Brothers Karamazov is the last novel by Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky. Dostoevsky spent nearly
two years writing The Brothers Karamazov, which was published as a serial in The Russian Messenger from January 1879
to November 1880. Dostoevsky died less than four months after its publication. It has been acclaimed as one of the
supreme achievements in world literature.
Set in 19th-century Russia, The Brothers Karamazov is a passionate philosophical novel that discusses questions of
God, free will, and morality. It has also been described as a theological drama dealing with problems of faith,
doubt, and reason in the context of a modernizing Russia, with a plot that revolves around the subject of patricide.
Dostoevsky composed much of the novel in Staraya Russa, which inspired the main setting.
Although Dostoevsky began his first notes for The Brothers Karamazov in April 1878, the novel incorporated elements and
themes from an earlier unfinished project he had begun in 1869 entitled The Life of a Great Sinner.