Princeton, Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002. — 784 p.
Transliteration and Texts.
A New Beginning.
A Quiet Return.
Grazhdanin: The Citizen.
Narodnichestvo: Russian Populism.
The Diary of a Writer, 1873: I.
The Diary of a Writer, 1873: II.
At Bad Ems.
A Literary Proletarian.
Notes for A Raw Youth.
A Raw Youth: Dostoevsky’s Trojan Horse.
A Personal Periodical.
A New Venture.
A Public Figure.
Intimations of Mortality.
The Diary of a Writer, 1876-1877.
Toward The Brothers Karamazov.
The Jewish Question.
Turgenev, Tolstoy, and Others.
Stories and Sketches.
“With Words to Sear the Hearts of Men”.
Resurrection and Rebellion.
Man in the Middle.
A New Novel — and a Feuilleton.
The Great Debate.
Rebellion and the Grand Inquisitor.
A Last Visit.
An Impatient Reader.
Terror and Martial Law.
The Pushkin Festival.
Pushkin: Two Readings.
The Diary of a Writer, 1880.
Controversies and Conclusions.
The Brothers Karamazov.
The Brothers Karamazov: Books 1-2.
The Brothers Karamazov: Books 3-4.
The Brothers Karamazov: Book 5.
The Brothers Karamazov: Book 6.
The Brothers Karamazov: Book 7.
The Brothers Karamazov: Books 8-9.
The Brothers Karamazov: Books 10-11.
The Brothers Karamazov: Book 12.
Death and Transfiguration.
Notes for a Phantom Future.
A National Symbol.
Finale.