Did the protagonist of "The Mediterranean White Grave," Dr. Wajdi, truly die under the snow? Or will he reappear in a different form in this second part?
This central question will only be answered by the novel "Vedya and the Tsar," in an adventure no less strange than his first.
What form did he assume? Did he truly become so close to Dostoevsky that he was able to extract from him what he had abandoned his family and the 21st century for?
Did his love for his narrative icon change when he was constantly by his side?
Did he grow weary of him on many occasions, to the point of seriously considering leaving him and returning to his own era?
And what about Dostoevsky himself? Did he, for example, discover the existence of an invisible being accompanying him on his travels? If so, what was his reaction?
Throughout all of this, the protagonist finds himself subjected to various harsh trials. What coincidences led him to Siberia in this second part, just as they did in the first?
Perhaps with a little patience and focus, we will discover that the novel answers all these questions... Will he once again be exposed to the experience of death?






