@barunpradhan

@barunpradhan

Barun Pradhan

16 Reads

Followers0

Following2

Joined 5 months ago

Barun Pradhan's Books by Status

10 Books

See all
Fear and Trembling
Gravity's Rainbow
The Myth of Sisyphus
War and Peace
The Nicomachean Ethics
The Master and Margarita
Of Mice and Men

Barun Pradhan's Reading Goals

Goal

4/10 books
40%

2026 Reading Goal

Read 10 books by . They're right on schedule! 🙌

Barun Pradhan's Pinned Prompts

Featured Prompt

5,998 books

What are your favorite books of all time?

When you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...

hardcover
Hardcover
Team
The Brothers Karamazov

Barun Pradhan's Most Popular Reviews

"Am I my brothers' keeper?" is a constant refrain throughout Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. It is when individuals fail to recognize that they must be "brothers to everyone," utilizing their God-given free will to harm the "ocean" of human beings, that suffering emerges. Ivan, perceiving the horrible effects of free will, rebels against God; however, as is displayed in the narrative, it is the same free will that provides an answer to suffering. For just as ideas become incarnate in Dostoevsky's novel, providing a narrative response to the problem of evil, so must incarnate love be the tangible response to evil and suffering in this world. Each human being is a keeper of all mankind, and suffering can only be truly combated when this responsible, all encompassing love becomes realized in each individual. For all are brothers and sisters Karamazov, all are "black smears" upon the face of the earth, and all are meant to be incarnate love to one another, a tangible kiss upon the lips of a suffering world.

- Taken from "Incarnate Love and Other Embodied Truths: Dostoevsky's Response to Suffering in The Brothers Karamazov" by Callaghan R. McDonough

Timshel.

Nobody exposes the thoughts inside of a man, like Doestoevsky.

Not everyone will have have the same thought process as you. Something that is crystal clear to you could be seen as muddy swamp to another.

Each person is an individual. Stop trying to understand and make sense of every one of them.