Insanciklar - Fyodor Dostoyevski May 2026

Essential reading for Dostoyevsky completists and anyone who believes that the smallest lives contain the greatest stories. A tender, sorrowful, and deeply human debut.

Insancıklar ( Poor Folk ) is where it all began—Dostoyevsky’s first novel, written when he was just 24, and already showing the psychological depth that would define his masterpieces. Told through a series of letters between a middle-aged, impoverished clerk named Makar Devushkin and a young, vulnerable seamstress named Varvara Dobroselova, the novel explores poverty not just as a material condition, but as a spiritual and emotional prison. Insanciklar - Fyodor Dostoyevski

Here’s a review of Insancıklar (the Turkish title for Dostoyevsky’s Poor Folk ) by Fyodor Dostoyevsky: Essential reading for Dostoyevsky completists and anyone who

The novel’s title, Insancıklar (“Little Humans” or “Poor Folk”), says it all. These are not grand tragic heroes but the invisible ones—clerks, seamstresses, widows, and orphans—whose inner lives are as vast and complex as any prince’s. The ending is devastating, realistic, and deeply tender. There is no miracle, only the slow, inevitable separation of two souls who once saved each other. Told through a series of letters between a

If you come to Insancıklar expecting the explosive drama of Crime and Punishment or the philosophical frenzy of Notes from Underground , you may find it quieter. But its power lies in that quietness. It is the cry of a young Dostoyevsky who already understood that hell is not just other people—it is being forgotten, invisible, and too poor to love properly.

★★★★☆ (4/5) – A masterpiece of empathy, if not yet the explosive genius of his later works.

Dostoyevsky’s use of the epistolary form is masterful. Through Makar’s rambling, self-deprecating letters, we see a man discovering his own voice, his literary tastes (he is deeply moved by Gogol’s The Overcoat ), and his painful awareness of being looked down upon. Varvara’s letters, more restrained and melancholic, offer a parallel story of resignation and quiet strength.