Project Gutenberg 2025-03-23 Public domain in the USA. 166 Dostoyevsky, Fyodor 1821 1881 Dostoevsky, Fyodor Dostoievski, Fédor Mikhailovitch Достоевский, Фёдор Михайлович Dostoievski, Fiodor Dostoievski, Fedor Mikhailovitch Dostoyevsky, F. M. Dostojewski, Fjodor Michailowitsch Dostoyevsky, Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky, Feodor Merezhkovsky, Dmitry Sergeyevich 1865 1941 Мережковский, Дмитрий Сергеевич Mérejkowsky, Dmitry de Mérejkowski, Dmitri Merejkowsky, Dmitry de Merejkowski, Dmitri Mereschkowski, Dmitri Merezhkovsky, Dmitri Moeller van den Bruck, Arthur 1876 1925 Bruck, Arthur Moeller van den Van den Bruck, Arthur Moeller Den Bruck, Arthur Moeller van Rahsin, E. K. 1886 1966 Rahsin, Less Разин, Э. К. Kaerrick, Less Kaerrick, Elisabeth Кэррик, Элизабет Кэррик, Лесс Sämtliche Werke 15 : $b Helle Nächte : Vier Novellen $aMuenchen :$bPiper, $c1920. Helle Nächte -- Das junge Weib -- Ein schwaches Herz -- Ein Roman in neun Briefen. the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net. This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library. “Sämtliche Werke 15: Helle Nächte: Vier Novellen” by Fyodor Dostoyevsky is a collection of novellas written in the mid-19th century. The book centers around deeply emotional stories set in St. Petersburg, exploring the inner lives, dreams, and struggles of its characters, especially those marginalized by society. One of its main novellas, “Helle Nächte” (“White Nights”), follows a sensitive and solitary protagonist who forms a fleeting but powerful bond with a young woman named Nasstenka. The collection as a whole is likely to appeal to those interested in psychological depth and vivid urban atmospheres. At the start of “Helle Nächte,” the opening novella, the reader is immersed in the lyrical nocturnal atmosphere of St. Petersburg, where the narrator—an unnamed, introspective “Träumer” (dreamer)—rambles through moonlit streets, experiencing both beauty and loneliness. The narrative quickly introduces his emotional state: he is familiar with the city’s facades but painfully cut off from true human connection. This solitude is disrupted when he encounters a weeping young woman, Nasstenka, leading to an encounter that blossoms into tentative friendship and mutual confidences. Through their dialogue, themes of isolation, longing, and the power of fleeting human connection are introduced, setting a tone of gentle melancholy and hope. (This is an automatically generated summary.) https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/009014492 20180111013513dostojewsk 1920 de Reading ease score: 81.1 (6th grade). Easy to read. de Russian fiction -- Translations into German PG Text Category: Novels Category: Russian Literature 593587 2025-07-30T04:48:05.660059 text/html 568263 2025-03-23T22:13:12 text/html 447224 2025-07-30T04:48:13.988517 application/epub+zip 445681 2025-07-30T04:48:07.514078 application/epub+zip 353549 2025-07-30T04:48:06.754035 application/epub+zip 579323 2025-07-30T04:48:19.037492 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 534198 2025-07-30T04:48:13.299495 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 543194 2025-07-30T04:48:04.756050 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 523203 2025-03-23T22:13:12 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 19895 2025-07-30T04:48:19.219477 application/rdf+xml 15861 2025-07-30T04:48:06.922030 image/jpeg 3253 2025-07-30T04:48:06.837038 image/jpeg 371825 2025-07-30T04:48:05.713064 application/octet-stream application/zip Archives containing the RDF files for *all* our books can be downloaded at https://book.klll.cc/wiki/Gutenberg:Feeds#The_Complete_Project_Gutenberg_Catalog de.wikipedia en.wikipedia en.wikipedia en.wikipedia de.wikipedia