Tolstoy and Dostoevsky have been credited with the mastering of the Great 19th century Russian novel.
The famous work of F.M. Dostoevsky are 1."White Nights" 2."The possessed" 3."Notes from Underground" 4."Crime and Punishment" 5." The Idiot" 6." The Brothers Karamazov"
Anytime you use the work of someone else, you cite it. If you do not, then it is plagiarism.
It is a Russian novel written by Leo Tolstoy.
Yes, Leo Tolstoy travelled as a youth to the western parts of russia, some of the germanic-slavic countries, including hungary and prussia and down to the czechoslav countries, through to turkey, and by ship back, passing through some greek islands. Tolstoy does mention meeting an Askhohy - a traditional storyteller, which is likely his rendering of Asokh. .NITBAFS
The novel you are referring to is "The House of the Dead". Dostoevsky drew upon his own experiences in a Siberian prison camp to write this semi-autobiographical work, offering a vivid portrayal of the harsh conditions and psychological effects of imprisonment.
Leo Tolstoy joined the Russian army as a volunteer and served in the Caucasus during the ongoing, low-grade conflict Russia fought there seemingly indefinitely. Some referred to it as a war, and Tolstoy did see some action in it, but it was nowhere near the scale of the heroics of the Napoleonic war he later described in War and Peace.Yet, Tolstoy's garrison life gave him both material and an opportunity to start his literary work.
You could try other classical Russian literature from about the same time. All I can think of is Dostoevskii.
Its a term associated with property cleanliness. Maintaining a neat, efficient and clean work area
All of Dostoyevsky's work was written in Russian and translated into English. Many of his English language books have "notes by the Translator" included in them.
Neither all work associated
No. The issuing card company will know what was purchased, but this information will not b associated with the purchaser.
No. The Pulitzer Prizes were first awarded in 1917 for American (US) work published in the preceding year (1916). Leo Tolstoy was Russian, lived outside the United States, and died in 1910, so he wouldn't have been eligible to participate.