Who was in the wrong here?
>>8981826
Bazarov was a nihilistic pseud.
the reader
The fathers were right. The sons were acting up.
None of them were
I distinctly remember getting a boner about halfway through the book
>mfw when the son patronisingly takes away his fathers Pushkin and gives him a chemistry book
Also, the part where Bazarov leaves his parents after only being with them for a day really struck me, more so than their reaction to his death for some reason
>>8981826
the really impressive thing was how much i hated Bazarov throughout, but still wept at his... well. Turgenev was a hell of a writer. True sincerity in that guy.