Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "In almost fifty years, Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote more than 725 letters, 315 of which are preserved. Although Dostoyevsky hated writing letters (but enjoyed reading letters), as he believed that he could not impress himself properly, they form a majority of his works. They are such important resources of his life and beliefs that the whole corpus of letters equals to a biography."@en }
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- List_of_letters_from_Fyodor_Dostoyevsky abstract "In almost fifty years, Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote more than 725 letters, 315 of which are preserved. Although Dostoyevsky hated writing letters (but enjoyed reading letters), as he believed that he could not impress himself properly, they form a majority of his works. They are such important resources of his life and beliefs that the whole corpus of letters equals to a biography.".
- Q15282651 abstract "In almost fifty years, Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote more than 725 letters, 315 of which are preserved. Although Dostoyevsky hated writing letters (but enjoyed reading letters), as he believed that he could not impress himself properly, they form a majority of his works. They are such important resources of his life and beliefs that the whole corpus of letters equals to a biography.".
- List_of_letters_from_Fyodor_Dostoyevsky comment "In almost fifty years, Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote more than 725 letters, 315 of which are preserved. Although Dostoyevsky hated writing letters (but enjoyed reading letters), as he believed that he could not impress himself properly, they form a majority of his works. They are such important resources of his life and beliefs that the whole corpus of letters equals to a biography.".
- Q15282651 comment "In almost fifty years, Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote more than 725 letters, 315 of which are preserved. Although Dostoyevsky hated writing letters (but enjoyed reading letters), as he believed that he could not impress himself properly, they form a majority of his works. They are such important resources of his life and beliefs that the whole corpus of letters equals to a biography.".