Few authors have been so well received, from their very first appearance in literature, as Dostoyevsky was. In 1845 he arrived in St. Petersburg, a quite unknown young man who only two years before had finished his education in a school of military engineers, and after having spent two years in the engineering service had abandoned it with the intention of devoting himself to literature.
He was only twenty-four when he wrote his first novel, Poor People, which his school comrades, Grigorovich, gave to the poet Nekrasov, offering it for a literary almanac. Dostoyevsky had inwardly doubted whether the novel would even be read by the editor. He was living then in a miserable room, when his comrades knocked at his door. They threw themselves on Dostoyevsky's neck, congratulating him with tears in their eyes.
Nekrasov and his friend had begun to read the novel late in the evening; they couldnt stop reading till they came to the end, and thy were so deeply impressed by it that they couldnt help going on his nocturnal expedition to see the author and tell him what they felt. A few days later Dostoevski was introduced to the great critic of the time, Belinsky, and from him he received the same warm reception. As to the reading public, the novel produced a quite sensation. The same must be said about all subsequent novels of Dostoyevsky. They had an immense sale over Russia.


