Xavier Ray’s Reviews > Crime and Punishment > Status Update
Xavier Ray
is on page 10 of 560
Just 10 pages in and Raskolinkov is already an amazing literary character from who to learn about human psychology
— Oct 25, 2025 12:50PM
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Xavier Ray
is on page 85 of 560
I’ve fallen in love with Crime and Punishment. The night of the murders is one of the most feverish, gripping, and psychologically charged passages I’ve ever read. The pacing feels manic and inevitable, every sentence pushing forward like a heartbeat. Dostoevsky writes madness and guilt with such control that it feels almost symphonic. He’s an absolute master.
— 10 hours, 0 min ago
Xavier Ray
is on page 68 of 560
Absolutely love Dostoyevsky’s pacing and rhythm.
— 11 hours, 10 min ago
Xavier Ray
is on page 48 of 560
What stands out here is how quickly Raskolnikov’s compassion turns to disgust. The letter fills him with guilt, and the drunk girl in the street triggers the same outrage—but it collapses just as fast. Dostoevsky shows a man who wants to be good yet doubts goodness itself. The policeman is secondary; the real conflict is in his mind, where every moral impulse argues with itself.
— 12 hours, 40 min ago
Xavier Ray
is on page 40 of 560
This is where Dostoevsky’s genius really shows. Raskolnikov is both right and wrong, both sane and unraveling. His disgust for these “respectable” men says as much about his own pride and alienation as it does about their corruption. It’s a breathtakingly complex scene—one letter pulling him closer to the edge.
— Oct 25, 2025 06:59PM
Xavier Ray
is on page 40 of 560
What’s striking is that he doesn’t even know them. Everything he believes about them comes straight from the letter and from his own imagination. But his instincts are sharp. He sees through the hypocrisy immediately, sensing how power and morality get twisted together in their world. At the same time, his reasoning already feels fevered. It’s hard to tell where his moral clarity ends and his paranoia begins.
— Oct 25, 2025 06:59PM
Xavier Ray
is on page 40 of 560
Raskolnikov’s reaction might be my favorite psychological moment so far. The letter itself is full of love and hope, but it’s also painfully naïve. She tells him all about Dunya’s disgrace with her employer and this new engagement to Pyotr Petrovich Luzhin, as if it’s a happy turn of fate. Raskolnikov reads it like it’s a warning from hell. He’s furious, disgusted, protective, and ashamed all at once.
— Oct 25, 2025 06:58PM
Xavier Ray
is on page 26 of 560
It’s the moment where his pity turns to cynicism and then to a dangerous new idea. Really powerful scene that shows how his moral boundaries start to blur.
— Oct 25, 2025 03:41PM
Xavier Ray
is on page 26 of 560
Just hit a fascinating turning point as Raskolnikov leaves the Marmeladovs. After leaving them a bit of money and feeling both pity and disgust, he suddenly flips into a kind of philosophical rebellion. He wonders out loud if all morality is just a set of fears imposed on us, and if that’s true, then maybe there are no barriers at all.
— Oct 25, 2025 03:41PM

