After being asked about art, a character in this novel says, “People are like trees in a forest; no botanist would think of studying each individual birch tree.” While standing by a window, a character in this novel confesses his love to a woman who marries a 46-year-old hypochondriac and inherits the estate Nikolskoe (“nee-KOL-sko-yeh”). At the beginning of this novel, a character who is compared to a jackdaw returns to a man whose brother settles in Dresden after pursuing Princess R. One of this novel’s protagonists mends an opponent’s leg immediately after a duel over the servant Fenichka. After a faulty autopsy, a character in this novel dies from an infected cut. At the beginning of this novel, Nikolai waits at his estate, Marino, for Arkady. For 10 points, Yevgeny Bazarov is a proponent of nihilism in what Ivan Turgenev novel? ■END■
ANSWER: Fathers and Sons [or Otcy i deti; or Fathers and Children]
<ASU A, European Literature>
= Average correct buzz position