0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

The Book of Mordechai and Lazarus - Two Novels (Hardcover): Gabor Schein The Book of Mordechai and Lazarus - Two Novels (Hardcover)
Gabor Schein; Translated by Ottilie Mulzet; Adam Z Levy
R643 Discovery Miles 6 430 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

The Book of Mordechai and Lazarus are the first and the second novels by Hungarian writer Gabor Schein. Published together in one volume, they comprise the first in Seagull Books's new Hungarian List series. Both novels trace the legacy of the Holocaust in Hungary. The Book of Mordechai tells the story of three generations in a Hungarian Jewish family, interwoven with the biblical narrative of Esther. Lazarus relates the relationship between a son, growing up in the in the final decades of late-communist Hungary, and his father, who survived the depredations of Hungarian fascists during the Second World War. Mordechai is an act of recovery an attempt to seize a coherent story from a historical maelstrom. By contrast, Lazarus, like Kafka's unsent letter to his own father, is an act of defiance. Against his father's wish to never be the subject of his son's writing, the narrator goes on to place his father at the center of his story. Together, both novels speak to a contemporary Hungarian society which remains all too silent towards the crimes of the past.

Autobiographies of an Angel - A Novel (Hardcover): Gabor Schein Autobiographies of an Angel - A Novel (Hardcover)
Gabor Schein; Translated by Ottilie Mulzet
R794 Discovery Miles 7 940 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

An unflinching narrative of family history in Hungary's Jewish community and the nation's deep complicity in the Holocaust "Gabor Schein is that rarest of elegists, endowed equally with a respect for history and an ecstasy of imagination."-Joshua Cohen, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Netanyahus Born in 1723 in a small German town, Johann Klarfeld is thirteen when his father dies. He is taken in by a kind Italian painter to live with him and his daughter in The Hague. But the daughter, beautiful and blind, has a secret. Two centuries later, Berta Josza is born during World War II in a village in northern Hungary. The daughter of a police officer, Berta watches chaos unfold through her father's eyes, from the plundering of the possessions of murdered Jews to the carnage of the 1956 Revolution. When she happens upon an enigmatic autobiography in a secondhand bookshop, she can't shake the sense that she somehow knows the author. Lyrical and haunting, this is an unforgettable story about the spirit of history and the individual fates that make up the whole-the entwinements of the past and their unshakable hold on the present.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Coffee a Day Keeps The Grumpy Away…
Alan Haynes Paperback R504 Discovery Miles 5 040
Jacob Hunter and the Seven Deadly Sins
J.P Lewis Hardcover R708 R651 Discovery Miles 6 510
Non-Metallic Biomaterials for Tooth…
P. Vallittu Hardcover R4,485 Discovery Miles 44 850
A Job with Horses
Josephine Pullein-Thompson Paperback R489 R461 Discovery Miles 4 610
Perspectives on Zygomatic Implants, An…
Anastasiya Quimby, Salam Salman Hardcover R4,633 Discovery Miles 46 330
Ougat - From A Hoe Into A Housewife, And…
Shana Fife Paperback  (5)
R280 R250 Discovery Miles 2 500
Reach for the Taut Rope
Delbert Martin Hardcover R679 R611 Discovery Miles 6 110
Fairness, Class and Belonging in…
K Smith Hardcover R1,522 Discovery Miles 15 220
Sally Ride - America's First Woman in…
Lynn Sherr Paperback R513 R483 Discovery Miles 4 830
Abnormal Child Psychology
Eric J. Mash, David Wolfe Hardcover R1,332 R1,243 Discovery Miles 12 430

 

Partners