I rely entirely on my feel of the language (I'm not a linguist though) and
literature. Nabokov's novel begins in the country, somewhere in the province of
St. Petersburg, not too far from the place where the Nabokovs' Vyra estate is
situated (about midway between Petersburg and Luga). On the other hand, there
really existed a minor writer Lugovoy, who took his pen-name after Luga
and who partly might have served as a model for Luzhin pere.
As to Dostoevsky's novels, practically all of them are set in the city.
Incidentally, because most surnames come from professions, the name Luzhin can
come from ludit', "to tin". Readers with a hypersensitive ear can also
discern lozh', "lie", in that name (Dostoevsky's Luzhin turns out
to be a lier).
Sorry, if I don't answer all of your questions (or if my answers are a bit
off theme). I do not risk it because my English is limited and you ask too many
questions.