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The great novel of 1920s Berlin life, in a superb new translation
by Michael Hofmann Franz Biberkopf is back on the streets of
Berlin. Determined to go straight after a stint in prison, he finds
himself thwarted by an unpredictable external agency that looks an
awful lot like fate. Cheated, humiliated, thrown from a moving car;
embroiled in an underworld of pimps, thugs, drunks and prostitutes,
Franz picks himself up over and over again - until one day he is
struck a monstrous blow which might just prove his final downfall.
A dazzling collage of newspaper reports, Biblical stories, drinking
songs and urban slang, Berlin Alexanderplatz is the great novel of
Berlin life: inventing, styling and recreating the city as reality
and dream; mimicking its movements and rhythms; immortalizing its
pubs, abattoirs, apartments and chaotic streets. From the gutter to
the stars, this is the whole picture of the city. Berlin
Alexanderplatz brought fame in 1929 to its author Alfred Doeblin,
until then an impecunious writer and doctor in a working-class
neighbourhood in the east of Berlin. Success at home was
short-lived, however; Doblin, a Jew, left Germany the day after the
Reichstag Fire in 1933, and did not return until 1945. This
landmark translation by Michael Hofmann is the first to do justice
to Berlin Alexanderplatz in English, brilliantly capturing the
energy, prodigality and inventiveness of Doeblin's masterpiece.
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Manas (Paperback)
Alfred Doeblin; Translated by Chris Godwin
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R329
Discovery Miles 3 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Reissued as a paperback by Plunkett Lake Press, Destiny's Journey
is a memoir reconstructed partly from notebooks that Doblin kept
from the time he worked in the French Ministry of Information in
the spring of 1940 and partly written without notes in Los Angeles
where he took refuge during the Second World War. It tells the
personal and generational story of the flight of Jewish and
anti-Nazi intellectuals from Europe to America, their fear and
frustration, isolation, and inability to work. Doblin's story
differs from that of other Jewish intellectuals and artists in that
his family converts to Catholicism in Los Angeles. Unlike most of
them, he returns to Europe as an officer with the French forces and
works on denazifying German literature. The conversion narrative
bridges the departure from and return to Europe. "The first part of
'Destiny's Journey' about] Doblin's departure from Paris in]
1940... is magisterial: acidly observed, saturated in telling
detail, grimly comic and harrowing... with an exemplary
introduction by Peter Demetz... an important, nourishing book" -
John Simon, The New York Times
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