White Nights became a genuine social media sensation in the UK, with the Penguin edition climbing to fourth among works in translation in 2024, and recent commentary has also noted a BookTok-era rise in interest around Notes from Underground. That feels like the perfect doorway into the larger Russian novels, the books where the scale grows, the stakes deepen, and the tradition fully opens out.
Tangled Prose is your bookish fix – from viral reads to cult classics. News, reviews, trends, and takes. Old favourites, and new finds. Always books.
Showing posts with label Fyodor Dostoevsky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fyodor Dostoevsky. Show all posts
Sunday, 19 April 2026
Why it is time to go deeper into the big Russian novels
If White Nights was your way into Dostoevsky, and Notes from Underground was the book that made you realise Russian fiction could feel unnervingly alive, then this is the moment to go further in, not step back.
Labels:
19th-century literature,
Book Recommendations,
classic literature,
Fyodor Dostoevsky,
Ivan Turgenev,
Leo Tolstoy,
Literary Fiction,
Mikhail Lermontov,
reading list,
Russian literature,
Russian novels
Wednesday, 5 November 2025
Why we’re in love with literary angst
From tear-in-the-rain heartbreak to existential quiet, bleaker classics are finding a new, eager audience.
Remember when reading heavy meant dragging yourself through dense tomes? Nowadays, bleakness has become chic. The recent surge in interest around titles such as White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky and Madonna in a Fur Coat by Sabahattin Ali is showing us something more profound about why readers gravitate toward literary angst.
Labels:
Ágota Kristóf,
Charlotte Brontë,
Domenico Starnone,
Elena Ferrante,
existential fiction,
Fyodor Dostoevsky,
Hans Fallada,
John Williams,
literary angst,
Osamu Dazai,
Ottessa Moshfegh,
Sabahattin Ali,
sylvia Plath
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