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Showing 1 - 25 of
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Jonah and His Daughter
Ioana Parvulescu; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R420
R343
Discovery Miles 3 430
Save R77 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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An omen that changes people, a story about how good and evil can
happen at once, about the simple ones, who don't distinguish right
from left, and about the complicated ones, who think they are
chosen by God. This is a novel about fathers and clever daughters,
who do not let the story die. A book where love comes uninvited, as
it always has done, full of suspense, and our undying desire to
find purpose in this life. Drawing on the Biblical story of Jonah,
the author brings to life a whole village of characters as well as
the monsters of the deep, invigorating our imagination in the
process.
Helene Cixous: live theory provides a clear and informative
introduction to one of the most important and influential European
writers working today. The book opens with an overview of the key
features of Cixous' theory of "ecriture feminine" (feminine
writing). The various manifestations of "ecriture feminine" are
then explored in chapters on Cixous' fictional and theatrical
writing, her philosophical essays, and her intensely personal
approach to literary criticism. The book concludes with a new,
lively and wide-ranging interview with Helene Cixous in which she
discusses her influences and inspirations, and her thoughts on the
nature of writing and the need for an ethical relationship with the
world. Also offering a survey of the many English translations of
Cixous' work, this book is an indispensable introduction to Cixous'
work for students of literature, philosophy, cultural and gender
studies.
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The Fate of Yaakov Maggid
Alistair Ian Blyth; Commentary by Alistair Ian Blyth; Ludovic Bruckstein
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R390
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
Save R72 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Once again, the extraordinary storyteller, Ludovic Bruckstein,
opens the door onto a lost world of Jewish history and lore in the
central European Carpathian region, now parts of Hungary, Romania
and Ukraine. Invoking the tales of a great maggid – a wandering
storyteller within the East-European tradition of Hassidism - he
weaves tales of wisdom and mystery which linger inside us long
after the story has ended. Bruckstein's previous titles (The Trap,
2019 and With an Unopened Umbrella in the Pouring Rain, 2021) have
gained him a growing audience of dedicated readers in the
English-speaking world, where his work has been too-long absent.
This edition comes complete with a fascinating glossary of terms
and historical references complied by the translator.
In Imaginary Performances in Shakespeare, visionary modernist
theatre director Aureliu Manea analyses the theatrical
possibilities of Shakespeare. Through nineteen Shakespeare plays,
Manea sketches the intellectual parameters, the visual languages,
and the emotional worlds of imagined stage interpretations of each;
these nineteen short essays are appended by his essay
'Confessions,' an autobiographical meditation on the nature of
theatre and the role of the director. This captivating book which
will be attractive to anyone interested in Shakespeare and modern
theatre.
In Imaginary Performances in Shakespeare, visionary modernist
theatre director Aureliu Manea analyses the theatrical
possibilities of Shakespeare. Through nineteen Shakespeare plays,
Manea sketches the intellectual parameters, the visual languages,
and the emotional worlds of imagined stage interpretations of each;
these nineteen short essays are appended by his essay
'Confessions,' an autobiographical meditation on the nature of
theatre and the role of the director. This captivating book which
will be attractive to anyone interested in Shakespeare and modern
theatre.
Nadia Comaneci is the Romanian child prodigy and global gymnastics
star who ultimately fled her homeland and the brutal oppression of
a communist regime. At the age of just 14, Nadia became the first
gymnast to be awarded a perfect score of 10.0 at the 1976 Montreal
Olympic Games and went on to collect three gold medals in
performances which influenced the sport for generations to come,
cementing Nadia's place as a sporting legend. However, as the
communist authorities in Romania sought an iron grip over its
highest-profile athletes, Nadia and her trainers were subjected to
surveillance from the Securitate, the Romanian secret police.
Drawing on 25,000 secret police archive pages, countless secret
service intelligence documents, and numerous wiretap recordings,
this book tells the compelling story of Nadia's life and career
using unique insights from the communist dictatorship which
monitored her. Nadia Comaneci and the Secret Police explores
Nadia's complex and combustible relationship with her sometimes
abusive coaches, Bela and Marta Karolyi, figures who would later
become embroiled in the USA Gymnastics scandal. The book addresses
Nadia's mental struggles and 1978 suicide attempt, and her
remarkable resurgence to gold at the Moscow Olympics in 1980. It
explores the impact of Nadia's subsequent withdrawal from
international activity and reflects on burning questions
surrounding the heart-stopping, border-hopping defection to the
United States that she successfully undertook in November 1989. Was
the defection organised by CIA agents? Was it arranged on the
orders of President George Bush himself? Or was Nadia aided and
abetted by some of the very Securitate officers who were meant to
be watching the communist world's most lauded sporting icon? What
is revealed is a thrilling tale of endurance and escape, in which
one of the world's greatest gymnasts risked everything for freedom.
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The Trap (Paperback)
Ludovic Bruckstein; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R300
R246
Discovery Miles 2 460
Save R54 (18%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The time is the twilight of the decrepit Brezhnev regime, the
place, the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldavia: the "Latin
periphery of empire." A pensioner seeks justice for his dead wife,
crushed by a falling crane--the very symbol of the "construction of
socialism"--but comes up against hostility from a cynical system at
best indifferent, at worst contemptuous of human life. With a keen,
Gogolian eye for the grotesque, often squalid, details of everyday
life in the USSR, Iulian Ciocan paints darkly humorous but
compassionate portraits of Homo sovieticus, from crusty war
veterans and lowly collective farm workers to venal Party bigwigs,
as each comes to the disturbing realization that the lofty ideals
of Soviet society were lies all along. And for idealistic young
pioneer Iulian, the biggest disillusionment of all will be the
abrupt revelation of Brezhnev's mortality.
In the late-1960s Romania, during the relative cultural thaw of the
post-Stalinist period, Dumitru Tsepeneag emerged as an innovative
writer of short prose and the pioneer of oneirism, a subversive
theory and practice of literature that challenged not only
socialist realism in particular but realism in general. By the
early 1970s, following a cultural crackdown by the totalitarian
state, oneirism had been banned and Tsepeneag was forced into exile
in France. Short Prose, Volume 1, collects the three volumes of
short stories that Tsepeneag published in Romania before going into
exile: Exercises (1966), Cold (1967), and Waiting (1971), along
with previously unpublished shorter texts from the same period.
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La Belle Roumaine (Paperback)
Dumitru Tspeneag; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R359
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Save R49 (14%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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La Belle Roumaine tells the story of Ana, a beautiful and
bewitching Romanian woman. Shuttling between the capital cities of
Europe. The novel follows Ana as she seduces cafe owners,
philosophers, and wandering emigrants alike, each receiving a
different version of her life story. To some, she's a former nurse,
to others, a former spy. To some she's French and to others,
Romanian. As each new layer of fabrication is added, the mystery of
Ana and of what she's running from grow apace.
A young man is found lying unconscious on the outskirts of
Bucharest. No one knows who he is and everyone has a different
theory about how he got there. The stories of the various
characters unfold, each closely interwoven with the next, and
outlining the features of what ultimately turns out to be the most
important and most powerful character of all: the city of Bucharest
itself. The novel covers the last 13 days of 1897 and culminates in
a beautiful tableau of the future as imagined by the different
characters. We might, in fact, say that it is we who inhabit their
future. And so too does Dan Cretu, alias Dan Kretzu, the
present-day journalist hurled back in time by some mysterious
process for just long enough to allow us a wonderful glimpse into a
remote, almost forgotten world, but one still very much alive in
our hearts.
The stories in this collection are stories of the lives and
struggles of a wonderful variety of characters living in the
Maramures region, in the years leading up to a war that will
suddenly and irretrievably destroy the pattern of their existence.
The eerily shocking ending of many of these stories is the moment
their protagonists climb on the cattle trains to be transported to
Auschwitz; while leaving the tale of their often tragic fate
unstated. Bruckstein's works, novels, stories and plays, deal with
the sometimes cruel, sometimes comic, lives of simple people whose
fate is controlled by highly unpredictable forces. These he
describes with understanding, compassion and forgiveness; smiling
at the petty worries and trivialities that people take so
seriously, while often remaining unaware of very real and
existential dangers. He belongs to a generation so well described
by the writer Czeslaw Milosz, in his book, The Captive Mind: "Few
inhabitants of the Baltic States, Poland or Czechoslovakia, of
Hungary or Romania, could summarize in a few words the story of
their existence. Their lives have been complicated by the course of
historic events".
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I'm an Old Commie! (Paperback)
Dan Lungu; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R386
R308
Discovery Miles 3 080
Save R78 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Emilia, a pensioner in northern Romania, is forced to confront the
nostalgic illusions she nurtures as a reaction to the grim
post-communist present when her daughter, now living in Canada,
telephones urging her not to vote for the former communists in
upcoming elections. Determined to discover in her own mind why
`things were better back then,’ she explores her memories of
growing up in an impoverished village and of her life as a factory
worker in the town. But ironic tension grows as the reader glimpses
between the lines how nothing was what it seemed in Ceaușescu’s
Romania. Interspersed among Emilia’s memories are fantastical,
hilarious anecdotes about the dictator, told by a factory foreman
who will turn out to have been a secret police informer. I’m an
Old Commie! is a subtle and humane novel about self-deception, but
also about the ways in which a totalitarian state twisted ordinary
lives.
Orlando, a novel loosely based on the life of Vita Sackville-West,
Virginia Woolf's lover and friend, is one of Woolf's most playful
and tantalizing works. This edition provides readers with a fully
collated and annotated text. A substantial introduction charts the
birth of the novel in the romance between Woolf and Sackville-West,
and the role it played in the evolution and eventual fading of that
romance. Extensive explanatory notes reveal the extent to which the
novel is embedded in Woolf's knowledge of Sackville-West, her
family history and her writings. Thorough annotation of every
literary and historical allusion in the text establishes its
significance as a parodic literary and social history of England,
as well as a spoof of one of Woolf's favorite forms, the biography.
It also includes all variants from the extant proofs, as well as
editions of the novel produced during Woolf's lifetime.
With each chapter embodying a separate Commandment, Living Tissue,
10x10 is both a Decalogue and a ribald, exuberant, deliriously
inventive postmodern Decameron, which covers four decades in the
life of the protagonist, unfolding against the backdrop of Soviet
and post-communist Moldova, from the untimely death of Yuri Gagarin
in 1968 to the so-called "twitter revolution" of 2009. Tens of
tragical, comical, fantastical, historical tales intertwine,
punctuated by the endless upheavals suffered by twentieth-century
Moldova. But the narrative also takes euphoric flight, in episodes
that travel as far afield as Paris, Moscow, and Tibet. In Living
Tissue. 10x10, Emilian Galaicu-Pa un engages in literary origami,
bending and blending together real and fictional worlds, abolishing
up and down, here and there, past and present, as if in an Escher
engraving, alternating narrative techniques, braiding myth, history
and literary allusion, transgressing the boundaries of languages
and cultures to create a rapturously intricate novel in ten
dimensions.
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The Encounter (Paperback)
Gabriela Adamesteanu; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R341
Discovery Miles 3 410
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Pushed around by ticket takers who demand his ticket in several
languages, a middle aged man goes through a nightmare of hiding and
getting away until he manages to cross a frontier guarded by
soldiers and dogs. He’s made it back to his native village. There
he finds his whole family gathered around a big table, as if for a
wedding, a baptism or a wake, but no one recognizes him, not even
his mother.
The cannibal has played a surprisingly important role in the
history of thought--perhaps the ultimate symbol of savagery and
degradation-- haunting the Western imagination since before the Age
of Discovery, when Europeans first encountered genuine cannibals
and related horrible stories of shipwrecked travelers eating each
other. "An Intellectual History of Cannibalism" is the first book
to systematically examine the role of the cannibal in the arguments
of philosophers, from the classical period to modern disputes about
such wide-ranging issues as vegetarianism and the right to private
property.
Catalin Avramescu shows how the cannibal is, before anything
else, a theoretical creature, one whose fate sheds light on the
decline of theories of natural law, the emergence of modernity, and
contemporary notions about good and evil. This provocative history
of ideas traces the cannibal's appearance throughout Western
thought, first as a creature springing from the menagerie of
natural law, later as a diabolical retort to theological dogmas
about the resurrection of the body, and finally to present-day
social, ethical, and political debates in which the cannibal is
viewed through the lens of anthropology or invoked in the service
of moral relativism.
Ultimately, "An Intellectual History of Cannibalism" is the
story of the birth of modernity and of the philosophies of culture
that arose in the wake of the Enlightenment. It is a book that lays
bare the darker fears and impulses that course through the Western
intellectual tradition
It wasn't until after Dumitru Tsepeneag fled Romania for France
in 1971 that he was able to speak frankly about the literary
movement that he had helped create.
Alistair Ian Blyth's Card Catalogue is a book about books. Set in
Bucharest in the decade after the Revolution, it presents a series
of dreamlike narratives loosely linked by the subject of libraries:
book hoarding, book hunting, book burning, and, above all, the
dreams of infinite other books-past and future-that every
individual codex volume inspires. Whether he is describing his
encounters with Gribski (whose strange hidden library in Bucharest
he is to see but once) or itemizing the various books whose
existence he has dreamed (including "a collection of children's
paeans to Ceausescu bound in the same volume as a slim commentary
on Pound's Canto XIV"), Blyth shows himself to be a card catalogue
unto himself. In the tradition of Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino,
and Alberto Manguel, this book is bound to please.
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The Bulgarian Truck (Paperback)
Dumitru Tspeneag; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R315
R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
Save R31 (10%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The writer-narrator of The Bulgarian Truck has hit upon a new
technique for writing a novel, which he calls "a building site
beneath the open sky," but he cannot persuade his more widely read
wife, Marianne, a character from an earlier novel, that it is any
good. Meanwhile, the narrator's extramarital affair with Milena, a
young Slovak novelist who writes in French, turns sour.
Interspersed among the narrator's accounts of his novel's growing
pains are stories of the characters he has invented-Tsvetan, a
Bulgarian truck driver, and Beatrice, an impenetrable French erotic
dancer-unfolding according to their own logic while hurtling toward
a fatal conclusion.
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Miruna: A Tale (Paperback)
Bogdan Suceava; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A village in the Carpathian Mountains, one of the last outposts of
pre-modernity, an elderly man, sensing his time is short, tells his
young grandchildren tales that weave a family saga covering the
real history from the 1870s to the time of the telling. One of the
children, now grown, is the re-teller of these tales, while the
other, Miruna, perhaps has the gift of second sight. Incorporating
elements of fantasy common to the storytelling traditions of the
Balkans, historical characters mix with imaginary beings in a
landscape that recreates the world of an isolated village bearing
an unusual name: Evil Vale. Ancestors are talked about as if
ancient heroes, and the novel shifts focus between telling about
their lives and the storyteller's own experiences through the prism
of the village during both world wars. As past tragedies are
presented in a way that the grandchildren might picture and
remember them, the novel has been called a kind of meta-fairy tale,
a story about the lost tradition of oral storytelling itself, the
conveyance of a family history from one generation to the next via
the spoken word. With the death of the grandfather, the children
realize that confronted with the ubiquitous hand of modernity,
which the village has managed to frustrate over a succession of
regimes, a whole world of stories and the entire memory of a family
and of its idiosyncratic way of life in the village might have been
irrevocably lost. Blending the autobiographical and historical with
the marvelous, Miruna, a Tale is a novel whose core is the
exploration of the imaginary themes and motives that informed
traditional society in the mountainous regions of Romania, a world
that was radically transformed into virtual extinction over the
course of the 20th century. Described by one critic as a "literary
jewel whose strange and singular spell holds the reader in its
thrall," Miruna, a Tale received the Bucharest Writers Association
Fiction Award in 2007.
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Matei Brunul (Paperback)
Lucian Dan Teodorovici; Translated by Alistair Ian Blyth
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R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The year is 1959, one of the darkest periods of Romania's communist
regime. Political prisoner Bruno Matei, a puppeteer of Italian
ancestry, has been released from jail a broken man, suffering from
amnesia. An uneasy relationship forms between `Matei Brunul' and
Bojin, the secret policeman who keeps him under constant
surveillance. Gradually, the secret police will try to remould
Matei's mind by rewriting his past, turning the puppeteer into a
puppet of the new totalitarian order. In parallel, a harrowing
second narrative reveals Matei's prison experiences: the story of
an innocent man physically and mentally crushed by the totalitarian
system, which explodes the manipulative fictions of the secret
police one by one. Matei Brunul was the first Romanian novel to
explore the carceral world of the former regime, but it is also a
subtle meditation on Heinrich von Kleist's On the Marionette
Theatre and the ways in which a totalitarian state and ultimately
fiction itself create and manipulate puppets.
Helene Cixous: live theory provides a clear and informative
introduction to one of the most important and influential European
writers working today. The book opens with an overview of the key
features of Cixous' theory of "ecriture feminine" (feminine
writing). The various manifestations of "ecriture feminine" are
then explored in chapters on Cixous' fictional and theatrical
writing, her philosophical essays, and her intensely personal
approach to literary criticism. The book concludes with a new,
lively and wide-ranging interview with Helene Cixous in which she
discusses her influences and inspirations, and her thoughts on the
nature of writing and the need for an ethical relationship with the
world. Also offering a survey of the many English translations of
Cixous' work, this book is an indispensable introduction to Cixous'
work for students of literature, philosophy, cultural and gender
studies.
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