It’s been said about Bernard Madoff that he wanted to be caught. That knowledge of the extent of his crimes was its own burden, one relieved by those same crimes being exposed. It was impossible not ...
On the one hand, there’s very little mystery to Fyodor Dostoevsky’s 1867 Russian masterpiece—the protagonist, a destitute former law student named Raskolnikov, commits the titular crime on ...
Fyodor Dostoevsky’s gripping novel "Crime and Punishment" traces the turbulent life of Raskolnikov (also known as Rodya), a university dropout who suffers from profound turmoil in 19th-century St.
It’s been said about Bernard Madoff that he wanted to be caught. That knowledge of the extent of his crimes was its own burden, one relieved by those same crimes being exposed. It was impossible not ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook American Ballet Theater unveils “Crime and Punishment,” an ambitious, but listless new production by Helen Pickett and James Bonas.